unemployment - The New School SCEPA
This report analyzes the results of new indicators from our previous indicator report, for the early 2000s.
The relationship between productivity growth and unemployment has been debated since the birth of classical economics.
Unemployment and employment rates are the conventional indicators used to measure economic and labor market performance.
National labor market performance is conventionally judged on the basis of unemployment and employment rates.
Generous unemployment benefits lie at the heart of the conventional explanation for persistent high unemployment.
The central claim of this paper is that a still richer account requires embedding the Keynesian account in a comparative political economy framework.
This paper calls into question standard measures of unemployment.
This paper reviews the evidence put forward in support of the orthodox prediction, which has relied on extrapolating from pre-Great Recession conditions.
Brief — January 2015 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
Brief — April 2015 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
Brief — June 2015 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
Brief — July 2015 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
Brief — August 2015 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
Brief — October 2015 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
Brief — January 2016 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
Brief — May 2016 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
December 2014 Unemployment Report for Workers Over 55
