enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Phillips curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phillips_curve

    (This is with shift B in the diagram.) High unemployment encourages low inflation, again as with a simple Phillips curve. But if unemployment stays high and inflation stays low for a long time, as in the early 1980s in the U.S., both inflationary expectations and the price/wage spiral slow.

  3. Natural rate of unemployment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_rate_of_unemployment

    The natural unemployment rate is mainly determined by the economy's supply side, and hence production possibilities and economic institutions. If these institutional features involve permanent mismatches in the labor market or real wage rigidities, the natural rate of unemployment may feature involuntary unemployment. The natural rate of ...

  4. Full employment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_employment

    An economy with less than full employment in Beveridge's sense will have either classical unemployment, cyclical unemployment, or both. Classical unemployment results from the actual real wage rising above the equilibrium real wage, so that the quantity of labor demanded (and the number of vacancies) is less than the quantity of labor supplied ...

  5. What's the Real Unemployment Number? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2011-02-09-real-unemployment...

    If adding 36,000 jobs to the 139 million jobs in the U.S. economy lowers the unemployment rate by 0.4 percentage points, then adding just 720,000 jobs should lower the unemployment rate by 8 ...

  6. Backward bending supply curve of labour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backward_bending_supply...

    The labour supply curve shows how changes in real wage rates might affect the number of hours worked by employees.. In economics, a backward-bending supply curve of labour, or backward-bending labour supply curve, is a graphical device showing a situation in which as real (inflation-corrected) wages increase beyond a certain level, people will substitute time previously devoted for paid work ...

  7. Labour economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labour_economics

    The wage increase shown in the previous diagram can be decomposed into two separate effects. The pure income effect is shown as the movement from point A to point C in the next diagram. Consumption increases from Y A to Y C and – since the diagram assumes that leisure is a normal good – leisure time increases from X A to X C .

  8. The Jobless Effect: Is the Real Unemployment Rate 16.5% ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2010-07-16-what-is-the-real...

    After all, the headline number shows the U.S. unemployment rate today is 9.5%, with a total of 14.6 million jobless people. However, Mayur's polls continued to find much worse figures.

  9. Fei–Ranis model of economic growth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fei–Ranis_model_of...

    The graph displays two MPL lines plotted with real wage and MPL on the vertical axis and employment of labor on the horizontal axis. OW denotes the subsistence wage level, which is the minimum wage level at which a worker (and his family) would survive.