Abstract

The study applies the flexible nonlinear inference approach of James D. Hamilton (2001) to investigate the relationship between cyclical components of unemployment and output in the Turkish economy where the unemployment rate remains at double digits despite the relatively stable economic environment over the last decade. The paper shows that economic expansion and contraction terms have an asymmetric effect on cyclical unemployment in Turkey. Moreover, the study identifies a specific range for the output gap level at which jobless growth pattern occurs in the Turkish economy. According to our findings, contrary to standard literature, cyclical component of unemployment does not decrease even though cyclical component of output is positive and increases in the middle stages of the upswing phase of the economy. This result may also indicate that the employers are reluctant to extend employment and alter into informalization for reasons such as over-valued domestic currency, surplus labour force and/or any rigid regulatory frameworks in the middle stages of the expansion phase of the economy. However, they become eager to expand employment and renounce informalization only after a certain rate of economic growth is achieved.

Highlights

  • The jobless growth performance over the last ten years in Turkey coincides with the middle stages of the upswing phases of the economy

  • This study analyzes the relationship between the unemployment gap and the output gap in Turkey by applying Hamilton’s (2001) flexible nonlinear inference methodology to Okun’s widely popular gap model

  • Using the quarterly data set for the period in which the Turkish economy was in a state of flux, this study evaluates the stable economic environment that Turkey experienced despite the low job creation performance

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Summary

Asymmetries in Okun’s Law: A Brief Literature Review

One can measure the cost of higher unemployment by using Okun’s rule of thumb. Arthur M. World Bank (2010) and Marek Hanusch (2012) pointed to another source of asymmetry, especially for developing economies According to this point of view, Okun’s Law is reversed for agricultural jobs. Jim Lee (2000) evaluated robustness of Okun’s relationship for 16 OECD economies and reported that there is mixed evidence of asymmetric behavior He showed that smaller output loss is associated with greater unemployment especially after the 1970’s in most countries. Mathieu Jardin and Stephan Gaétan (2012) employed a semi-parametric approach to describe Okun’s Law for 16 European countries According to their findings, unemployment responds more strongly to output when the economy is contracting than expanding. Unemployment responds more strongly to output when the economy is contracting than expanding They concluded that asymmetries in the relationship have to be taken into account when designing structural and stabilization policies. Policies in the downswing phase of the economy will be inadequate in the middle of recessions and during recoveries because of the regime dependent Okun’s coefficient

Jobless Growth Path of the Turkish Economy in the Past Decade
The Methodological Issues
Theoretical Background
The Gap Model
Flexible Nonlinear Inference
Empirical Results
Conclusion
Full Text
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