Abstract

There are two major hypotheses about the dynamics of unemployment in the literature: (i) natural rate of employment hypothesis, (ii) unemployment hysteresis hypothesis. The natural rate of employment hypothesis (NAIRU) implies a stable relationship between unemployment and business cycles in the long run. This means economic shocks arising in the business cycle creates a temporary imbalance in the unemployment rate. In other words, after an economic shock, the unemployment rate will return to long-term equilibrium level. In contrary to this argument, according to unemployment hysteresis hypothesis, unemployment move away from equilibrium state due to economic shocks and this state continues in the long run. The persistent imbalance means that unemployment have mean-deviation in the long run. As econometric approach, the unemployment series have an unstable trend. If unemployment rate is stable in the long run, the hysteresis effect becomes not valid. That is why the relationship between unemployment rate and business cycle will be the main issue of this study. According to that the hysteresis effect on unemployment rate in OECD countries has been analyzed. In this research the hysteresis effect on unemployment for women and men has also been separately examined. Thus, the research would allow us to distinguish and compare the gender differentiation within the OECD countries. The models have been estimated using yearly unemployment rate data from 1991 to 2014 for OECD countries and obtained from ILO statistics. Within the mentioned context above, Hysteresis effect has been analyzed with Panel Unit Root Tests, which both allowing and not allowing structural breaks. It is expected that the hysteresis effect on unemployment differs in terms of both gender and country level.

Highlights

  • There are two main theories explaining the relationship between unemployment and cyclical fluctuations

  • The first of one is the natural rate of unemployment or NAIRU expresses that unemployment rate is the mean reverting process

  • We used classical panel unit root tests not taking the structural breaks into accunt and the Panel LM unit root testing the unit root process under the structural breaks for 17 OECD countries

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Summary

Introduction

There are two main theories explaining the relationship between unemployment and cyclical fluctuations. The second one is the "hysterisis” hypothesis expresses that economic shocks leave a lasting impact on the unemployment rate (Camarero and Tamarit, 2004:413). There are many studies about effect of the presence of hysteresis hypothesis or NAIRU on the unemployment rate in economic literature. Most of the studies mentioned analyzed the presence of the hysteresis effect with classical unit root tests for countries or groups of countries. The models in the studies are mainly use unit root tests with structural breaks. The main difference between these tests is the reduction in the reliability of the result, if the impact of structural breaks is ignored. The labor market in these studies is mainly taken as a whole. The studies that make labor market distinctions such as sector, gender, age group and education are in the minority

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