Okun's law/Definition: Difference between revisions

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An empirically-observed  relationship between a change in output and change in unemployment, normally expressed as  
An empirically-observed  relationship between a change in output and change in unemployment, normally expressed as change in unemployment rate &nbsp;=&nbsp;α&nbsp;-&nbsp;β&nbsp;x&nbsp; change in real output, &nbsp;where α is an intercept coefficient, and &nbsp;β&nbsp;is the elasticity of the unemployment rate with respect to output, and  based on  the finding that, in the United States of the 1950s, and 1960s, for every  one percent increase in unemployment there had on average been a three percent drop in the ratio of actual GDP to full capacity GDP.
change in unemployment rate &nbsp;=&nbsp;α&nbsp;-&nbsp;β&nbsp;x&nbsp; change in real output, &nbsp;where α is an intercept coefficient, and &nbsp;β&nbsp;is the elasticity of the unemployment rate with respect to output, and  based on  the finding that, in the United States of the 1950s, and 1960s, for every  one percent increase in unemployment there had on average been a three percent drop in the ratio of actual GDP to full capacity GDP.

Latest revision as of 00:15, 16 April 2010

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Okun's law [r]: An empirically-observed relationship between a change in output and change in unemployment, normally expressed as change in unemployment rate  = α - β x  change in real output,  where α is an intercept coefficient, and  β is the elasticity of the unemployment rate with respect to output, and based on the finding that, in the United States of the 1950s, and 1960s, for every one percent increase in unemployment there had on average been a three percent drop in the ratio of actual GDP to full capacity GDP.