Abstract

We explore the relationship between unemployment and inflation in the United States (1949-2019) through both Bayesian and spectral lenses. We employ Bayesian vector autoregression (“BVAR”) to expose empirical interrelationships between unemployment, inflation, and interest rates. Generally, we do find short-run behavior consistent with the Phillips curve, though it tends to break down over the longer term. Emphasis is also placed on Phelps’ and Friedman’s NAIRU theory using both a simplistic functional form and BVAR. We find weak evidence supporting the NAIRU theory from the simplistic model, but stronger evidence using BVAR. A wavelet analysis reveals that the short-run NAIRU theory and Phillips curve relationships may be time-dependent, while the long-run relationships are essentially vertical, suggesting instead that each relationship is primarily observed over the medium-term (2-10 years), though the economically significant medium-term region has narrowed in recent decades to roughly 4-7 years. We pay homage to Phillips’ original work, using his functional form to compare potential differences in labor bargaining power attributable to labor scarcity, partitioned by skill level (as defined by educational attainment). We find evidence that the wage Phillips curve is more stable for individuals with higher skill and that higher skilled labor may enjoy a lower natural rate of unemployment.

Highlights

  • Dating back to at least 1926 (Fisher [1]), economists have pondered the relationship between inflation and unemployment

  • Unemployment for the Bachelors group is clustered below 5%

  • In the context of the conventional Phillips curve and NAIRU theory analysis performed we find it plausible that an environment of low and stable inflation could explain the lack of a medium-run Phillips tradeoff in our results from the early-1990’s to mid-2000’s

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Summary

Introduction

Dating back to at least 1926 (Fisher [1]), economists have pondered the relationship between inflation and unemployment. 292, Phillips notes “...wage rates rose more slowly than usual in the upswing of business activity from 1893 to 1896 and returned to their normal pattern of change; but with a temporary increase in unemployment during 1897 This suggests that there may have been exceptional resistance by employers to wage increases from 1894 to 1896, culminating in industrial strife in 1897. We seek to explore potential differences in bargaining power stemming from labor scarcity/abundance by skill level as defined by educational attainment We accomplish this using Phillips’ simple hyperbolic functional form to determine the degree of convexity in the wage growth–unemployment relationship and the point of wage stability.

Literature Review
Methodological Overview
Results and Interpretation
Conclusion
NAIRU Theory Graphical Representation
LHS Restatement
Impulse Response Function Comparison
Methodology
A New short-run Phillips curve
Relevant Literature
Full Text
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