2012
DOI: 10.2298/pan1204393f
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How do institutions affect structural unemployment in times of crises?

Abstract: This paper examines the effect of economic crises on structural unemployment using an Autoregressive Distributed Lags model and accounting for the role of institutional settings on an unbalanced panel of 30 OECD economies from 1960 to 2006. We found that downturns have, on average, a significant positive impact on the level of structural unemployment rate. The maximum impact varies with the severity of the downturn. Institutions (such as employment protection legislation, average replacement ratio and pr… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Another similar result comes from a paper by Furceri and Mourougane (2009), who study the impact of economic crises on the structural unemployment rate in a panel of 30 OECD countries from 1970 to 2008. They find that while structural unemployment was relatively untouched by crises in countries with flexible labor and product markets, some sizeable increases could be observed in countries with rigid labor and product markets.…”
Section: Related Literaturesupporting
confidence: 56%
“…Another similar result comes from a paper by Furceri and Mourougane (2009), who study the impact of economic crises on the structural unemployment rate in a panel of 30 OECD countries from 1970 to 2008. They find that while structural unemployment was relatively untouched by crises in countries with flexible labor and product markets, some sizeable increases could be observed in countries with rigid labor and product markets.…”
Section: Related Literaturesupporting
confidence: 56%
“…Stringent legislation seems to dampen the unemployment-increasing effect in the short term in case of macroeconomic shocks, but prolongs the period required for unemployment to return to its previous level. Evaluating the effects of employment protection legislation on structural unemployment in economic downturns, Furceri and Mourougane (2009) find that crises increase structural unemployment in countries with above average stringency in employment protection.…”
Section: Cross-country Studies: Aggregate Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…111 In a comparable context, Cerra and Saxena (2009) and Furceri and Mourougane (2009a;2009b) apply an autoregressive estimation technique to analyse the effects of financial crises on GDP growth. However, as so-called impulse-response functions are calculated recursively, this approach has been criticised for being sensitive to small specification or estimation errors that always exist in practice.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%