Applying the WS-PS Model to Explain Unemployment Divergence
The Wage-Setting/Price-Setting (WS-PS) model provides a framework for analyzing the root causes of differing structural unemployment and wage growth rates among countries. It explains these divergences by examining how country-specific factors affect the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) curves. For example, the model suggests that to understand why a country like Germany outperformed Spain, one must identify factors that shift the price-setting curve up (raising the equilibrium real wage) while keeping the wage-setting curve low enough to sustain high employment.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.2 Unemployment, wages, and inequality: Supply-side policies and institutions - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
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Conditions for Favorable Labor Market Outcomes in the WS-PS Model
Insufficiency of Taxation to Explain Spain's vs. Germany's Labor Market Performance
Shortcomings of the WS-PS Model
Comparative Labor Market Performance
A country enacts new legislation that significantly increases the bargaining power of labor unions, allowing them to negotiate for higher wages at any given level of employment. Within the framework of the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) model, what is the most likely outcome of this policy change on the country's structural unemployment rate?
Within the wage-setting and price-setting framework, a government policy that leads to a sustained increase in the average markup that firms can charge over their costs will, all else being equal, result in a lower equilibrium rate of unemployment.
Impact of Product Market Competition
Comparative Analysis of Labor Market Institutions
A country's government simultaneously implements two new policies: it reduces the generosity of unemployment benefits and it weakens its antitrust laws, leading to less competition among firms. Within the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework, what is the overall effect of these combined policies on the country's equilibrium rate of unemployment?
Match each economic event to its most likely direct effect within the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework.
An economy simultaneously experiences a decrease in its equilibrium rate of unemployment and an increase in its equilibrium real wage. Within the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework, which of the following events is the most plausible explanation for this specific combination of outcomes?
Policy Evaluation for Reducing Structural Unemployment
Evaluating a Labor Market Analysis
Applying the WS-PS Model to Explain Unemployment Divergence
Long-Standing Unemployment Divergence: Spain vs. Germany and Denmark (Figure 2.29)
Learn After
Institutional and Policy Comparison: Germany vs. Spain
WS-PS Model Conditions for Favorable Labor Market Outcomes
Comparative Labor Market Performance
Consider two countries, A and B, with different labor market characteristics. Country A has a higher degree of product market competition and less generous unemployment insurance compared to Country B. Based on the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework, what is the most likely outcome for Country A's equilibrium unemployment rate and real wage compared to Country B's?
Explaining Divergent Labor Market Outcomes
Analyzing Conflicting Labor Market Policies