1 / 9

The Current Account and Domestic Unemployment

The Current Account and Domestic Unemployment. A United States analysis 1970-2008 Joseph Perry. Research Question. Research Hypothesis The Current Account balance has a significant, positive effect on the US unemployment rate.

tyrone-todd
Download Presentation

The Current Account and Domestic Unemployment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Current Account and Domestic Unemployment A United States analysis 1970-2008 Joseph Perry

  2. Research Question • Research Hypothesis • The Current Account balance has a significant, positive effect on the US unemployment rate. • (that is to say a rise in the US Current Account balance leads to a rise in US Unemployment rate) • Null Hypothesis • The Current Account balance has no significant effect on the US Unemployment rate.

  3. Background/Literature Review Griswold, Daniel. "Bad News on the Trade Deficit Often Means Good News on the Economy." Free Trade Institute. Cato Institute, 11 Jan. 2005. Web. Conclusion- Current account deficit associated with growing economy, thus higher wages and lower unemployment. “Evaluations of Current Account Fluctuations” Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry. Japan. September 2008 Conclusion- Current account balance does not have a clear relation to unemployment

  4. Data • Sample Size: 39 years 1970-2008 • Independent and dependent variables are all interval-ratio level of measurement • Dependent Variable: US Unemployment rate (unemployed/labor force *100) (Dept of Labor) • Independent Variables: • Current Account balance • Absolute level (US Dept Com) • Average price of barrel of oil • US dollars (IOGA) • Inflation rate • Percentage (Dept of Labor) • Wage rate (Dept Labor) • GDP per capita • (Constant 1995 dollars)

  5. Descriptive Statistics/Graphs

  6. Descriptive Statistics

  7. Autocorrelation • With a Time Series, Autocorrelation is always an issue • Autocorrelation of the Unemployment variable strong • Therefore I took the first difference (UnEmploy[_n]- UnEmploy[_n-1])/(UnEmploy[_n-1]) There was no significant Autocorrelation of this variable

  8. Regression Analysis dUnemployment is the dependent variable

  9. Conclusion • Initially not significant, but when you start controlling for inflation and econ growth… • Then Balance becomes statistically significant • Positive direction • Therefore, on account of the significance of the more complex model, I reject the HO and accept the HR :Current Account Balance does have a significant effect on the US Unemployment rate • Weakness of study—very complex issue • Policy suggestions---Continue current account deficit, lucky choice for present situation

More Related