"Is the recent downturn in the economy and the increase in unemployment that has come along with it mostly from structural unemployment as Phelps has argued, or is it mostly a cyclical event? This is important because if it is from sectoral reallocation, the natural rate of unemployment should rise, and this would lead the Fed to be more willing to tighten interest rates to prevent inflation (because the deviation of unemployment from the new, higher target would be smaller). However, according to this research, the evidence does not favor Phelps' interpretation: "
Read the post.
Here's my reply:
Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat | Link to comment | October 17, 2008 at 08:38 PM
My problem is that if I were on the Fed, this article wouldn't settle the issue for me, especially if I'm looking ahead. My guess is that they would not raise rates, but I can't know that.