Abstract
The analysis of the processes determining unemployment in an open
economy has been considerably advanced by the work of Layard, Nickell
and Jackman in their book Unemployment: Macroeconomic Performance
and the Labour Market. Reviews their contribution. They have
developed an analysis based on the role of the “wedge”
between the producer and consumer wages. This wedge depends, in part, on
the real exchange rate. A change in the wedge may change the bargain
between unions and employers. If it does, then a change in the real
exchange rate may change the equilibrium level of unemployment. It is
frequently claimed that this is, indeed, the case. Argues that the
theoretical and empirical support for this proposition is rather weak.
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance