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World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

World 29/World 08

Page 2: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

World Industrial Production

Page 3: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Fed forecast of the unemployment rate

Page 4: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Civilian Employment-Population Ratio

Page 5: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Some perspective

• EPI: U.S. needs to add 127,000 jobs a month to keep up with population growth

• Pre-crisis unemployment within two years add 580,000 jobs per month

• Five years300,000 per month

Page 6: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Annual averages of monthly job gains going back to Clinton

Page 7: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Divergence

Page 8: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Structural Shift? (Or: who’s unemployed? Everyone.)

Page 9: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Weak Recovery

Page 10: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Okun’s Law

Page 11: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Okun’s Law• The horizontal axis shows annual growth rates of real GDP;

the vertical axis shows the year-to-year change in the unemployment rate.

• First, the economy has to grow around 2 1/2 percent per year just to keep unemployment from rising.

• Second, growth above that level leads to a less than one-for-one fall in unemployment (because hours per worker rise, more people enter the work force, etc.).

• Roughly, it takes two point-years of extra growth to reduce the unemployment rate by one point.

• Suppose that from here on out the U.S. averages 4.5 percent growth. Unemployment would be close to 8 percent at the end of 20126 percent by 2014.

Page 12: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Recession Comparison

Page 13: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.
Page 14: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

European Unemployment

Page 15: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

European Unemployment

Page 16: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

LTU

Page 17: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

The Baltic Disaster/Miracle

Page 18: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Business investment, U.S.

Page 19: World 29/World 08. World Industrial Production Fed forecast of the unemployment rate.

Global Unemployment (01/11)