2001
DOI: 10.1111/1475-4932.00003
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An Estimate of the Range of Equilibrium Rates of Unemployment for Australia

Abstract: This paper estimates the range of equilibrium rates of unemployment for Australia. The estimation technique nests a unique equilibrium rate of unemployment as a special case. It is found for the period 1965^97 that a range of equilibria of at least 6.6 percentage points of unemployment exists in Australia. The lower limit of this range, which is the minimum rate of unemployment consistent with non-increasing in£ation, was 2^3 per cent in the 1960s, jumped in the early 1970s and was about 5.6 per cent during th… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(44 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…25 More recently, in Lye et al (2001; Table 2), the estimation of a Phillips curve in which unemployment benefits are allowed to influence a unique equilibrium rate of unemployment finds the impact of unemployment benefits to be positive and significant.…”
Section: (Ii) Unemployment Benefits and The Equilibriummentioning
confidence: 99%
“…25 More recently, in Lye et al (2001; Table 2), the estimation of a Phillips curve in which unemployment benefits are allowed to influence a unique equilibrium rate of unemployment finds the impact of unemployment benefits to be positive and significant.…”
Section: (Ii) Unemployment Benefits and The Equilibriummentioning
confidence: 99%
“…a large negative shock has pushed the economy to the lower end of the range, an expansionary monetary policy moving the economy to the upper end of the range will in fact involve a permanent increase in aggregate output. Lye, McDonald and Sibly (2001) find empirical support for the existence of a range of equilibrium unemployment rates in Australia.…”
Section: A Multiplicity Of Equilibriamentioning
confidence: 71%
“…The NAIRU is estimated by (i) applying the Kalman filter technique (Debelle and Vickery, 1998), (ii) using VAR (Crosby and Olekalns, 1998) and SVAR models (Groenewold and Hagger, 2000), and (iii) by embedding the Phillips curve into a big macroeconomic model such as the Treasury macroeconomic (TRYM) model (Song and Freebairn, 2005). Finally, Lye et al (2001), and Lye and McDonald (2006) use the range model (which allows for a piece-wise linear short-run Phillips curve), to evaluate the minimum equilibrium rate of unemployment, and contrast their model to NRU specifications.…”
Section: Some Key Features Of the Literature On Australiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It may also be due to the peculiarly narrow-based investment booms in Australia and the wage spillovers that they caused elsewhere in the economy." [p. [43][44] In contrast to the above work, this paper follows the chain reaction theory (CRT) of unem-ployment, presented in Section 3, and shows that capital stock affects positively employment in the long-run, while capital accumulation is inversely related with the ups and downs of the unemployment rate. The contribution of capital stock to the evolution of unemployment is among the several important considerations which distinguish the CRT from the NAIRU framework of analysis.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%