Rising unemployment
James Hamilton (September 5th, 2008) Writes:
Is there anything good to say about today's report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics that the U.S. unemployment rate jumped up to 6.1% while seasonally adjusted nonfarm payrolls declined by another 84,000 jobs? Well, here's one thing. It gives us some real clarity as to just where the economy stands.
Civilian unemployment rate, from FRED, with NBER recessions as shaded regions.
Sure looks like a recession when you inspect a graph the unemployment rate, doesn't it? And it also looks like a recession from the perspective of a model of unemployment dynamics that I published in 2005. If you use that model to analyze the latest unemployment numbers, you'd calculate the current probability of being in a recession at 95%.
Probability that the economy is in either a mild or severe recession at indicated date, ...Tags for this Post:
Brad DeLong, Bureau Of Labor Statistics, Economics, Ed Leamer, Justin Fox, Paul Krugman, UCLA, United States, William Polley
Brad DeLong, Bureau Of Labor Statistics, Economics, Ed Leamer, Justin Fox, Paul Krugman, UCLA, United States, William Polley


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