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Trade with Unemployment

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Stephen Lynch. US Congressman Mass. More Quotes. The global economy is a fact. ... in trade literature: Costs are probably small (Baldwin et al, Magee and others) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Trade with Unemployment


1
Trade with Unemployment
  • Carl Davidson
  • Michigan State University

2
An Outline of the Lectures
  • Day 1
  • Why should we care?
  • What is the appropriate framework?
  • Day 2
  • Insights using old trade theory?
  • Day 3
  • How can we extend new trade theory to account
    for unemployment and what are the big questions
    to tackle next?

3
Why should we care?
  • Reason 1 Public perceptions about the important
    impact of international trade
  • The public and most politicians seems absolutely
    convinced that trade is all about the jobs that
    it creates and/or destroys

4
Some Quotes
  • Unfair trade agreements, passed by both
    Republicans and Democrats, have sent millions of
    jobs to other countries. We need to stop this
    hemorrhaging and find ways for American workers
    to compete in the new market. Russ Feingold
  • (US Senator -- Wisconsin)

5
Some Quotes
  • Over the last five years, Wisconsinites have lost
    nearly 80,000 manufacturing jobs, largely because
    of unfair trade agreements and questionable
    administration policies. Russ Feingold
  • (US Senator -- Wisconsin)

6
Some Quotes
  • The Bush Administration and the Congress have to
    stop ignoring this crisis in international trade.
    The longer we ignore it, the more American jobs
    will move overseas. It's just that simple
    Byron Dorgan
  • US Senator North Dakota

7
More Quotes
  • There is 1.4 billion a day in trade that goes
    back and forth across the border. That means
    millions of jobs and livelihoods for families
    here in Canada and for families in the United
    States. Paul Cellucci
  • US Ambassador to Canada

8
More Quotes
  • Since NAFTA was put in place, Mexico has lost 1.9
    million jobs and most Mexicans' real wages have
    fallen. Stephen Lynch
  • US Congressman Mass.

9
More Quotes
  • The global economy is a fact. The expansion of
    world trade - with exports up over 50 per cent
    since 1990 - has created millions of new jobs and
    offered many the chance to move from poverty
    towards prosperity
  • and, above all that more open markets and more
    trade mean growth and new jobs . Tony Blair
  • Statement to the WTO 1998

10
More Quotes
  • Free trade is the key to jobs for our people,
    prosperity and actually to development in the
    poorest parts of the world. Tony Blair
  • Statement to Canadian
  • Parliament, 2001

11
An Intriguing Quote
  • Trade creates jobs and lifts people out of
    poverty. And when that happens, societies
    stabilize and grow. And there is nothing like a
    stable society to fight terrorism and strengthen
    democracy, freedom and rule of law. Dennis
    Hastert
  • Speaker of the House

12
Last Political Quote
  • Sound science must be a basis to governing our
    trade relations around the globe. Bill Frist
  • Senate Majority Leader

13
The Academic Response
  • It should be possible to emphasize to students
    that the level of employment is a macroeconomic
    issue.. depending in the long run on the natural
    rate of unemployment, with microeconomic policies
    like tariffs having little net effect.
  • Paul Krugman
  • AER 1993

14
The Academic Response
  • Economists understand that the effects of
    protectionist policies is not on the overall
    employment of domestic resources, but rather on
    the allocation of resources across productive
    activities.
  • Michael Mussa
  • AER 1993

15
What is Wrong Here?
  • We have no basis for these beliefs
  • All our basic trade models assume full employment
  • These claims lack credibility, too easy for
    non-academics to simply dismiss
  • Most empirical work focuses on industry studies,
    not aggregate impact
  • Economies with unemployment may behave very
    differently from economies with full employment

16
Why should we care?
  • Reason 2 What macroeconomics has taught us
    about the importance of imperfect labor markets
  • Do models that account for unemployment behave in
    approximately the same way as full employment
    models? If not, how do they differ?

17
Original Presumption?
  • The natural rate of unemployment," in other
    words, is the level that would be ground out by
    the Walrasian system of general equilibrium
    equations, provided there is embedded in them the
    actual structural characteristics of the labor
    and commodity markets, including market
    imperfections, stochastic variability in demands
    and supplies, the cost of gathering information
    about job vacancies and labor availabilities, the
    costs of mobility, and so on.
  • Milton Friedman (AEA Presidential Address)

18
Lessons from Macroeconomics
  • Small market imperfections may lead to big
    differences in equilibria (the Diamond paradox)
  • Market imperfections often generate externalities
    and feedback effects expectations become very
    important
  • (Mortensen 1982 Diamond 1980s)

19
Also..
  • I will argue later that even when equilibria are
    efficient, models that allow for unemployment
    behave differently than full employment models
  • Example The link between trade and wages
    (Stolper-Samuelson Theorem) will be fundamentally
    different in the presence of unemployment

20
Implications
  • Institutions (in particular, the structure of the
    labor market) matter!
  • Tell Krugman story from Stolper-Samuelson Theorem

21
Why should we care?
  • Reason 3 What labor economics has taught us
    about the structure of labor markets and the
    personal costs from dislocation

22
Differences in Institutions
  • US labor market very flexible (much turnover),
    weak union presence, little or no regulations
    concerning firing/hiring
  • Europe inflexible (less turnover, rigid wages),
    strong unions in some countries, many countries
    have firing costs
  • Australia, Japan have different structures as
    well (Freeman 1994, 1998)

23
Implications elsewhere
  • Labor and macroeconomists realize these
    difference have important implications (in terms
    of training, macroeconomic performance, .)
  • Hard to believe that this does not matter for the
    impact of trade (some realization of this in
    labor market distortions literature of 1970s
    Bhagwati, Magee and others)

24
Adjustment Costs
  • Traditional view in trade literature Costs are
    probably small (Baldwin et al, Magee and others),
    much smaller than gains, sowe can compensate the
    losers without exhausting the gains
  • Estimates of costs ignore search and training
    costs, treat unemployment in an ad hoc manner
  • We do not compensate the losers

25
Adjustment Costs
  • Labor economists have found that the personal
    costs of worker dislocation may be quite high
    (Jacobsen et al 1993 Kletzer 2001)
  • Now indications that aggregate costs may be
    higher than previously thought (Trefler AER 2004,
    DM 2001)

26
What sort of framework should we use?
  • Search theory?
  • Efficiency or fair wages?
  • Incomplete contracts?
  • Union power?
  • Minimum/rigid wages?
  • It probably does not matter

27
Focus will be on search theory
  • Advantages Intuitive appeal, can be added
    without altering basic structure of most models,
    leads to a rich framework (heterogeneity on both
    sides of the labor market), considerable
    empirical work pins down features of the models
    fundamentals, can therefore be calibrated and
    used for policy analysis more easily than most
    models of unemployment

28
Focus will be on search theory
  • Disadvantages Dynamics, which are so important
    for analysis of adjustment, can get quite messy
    very quickly restricting attention to one
    framework leaves one with the impression that
    results are not general this is usually not the
    case (emphasized in DM 2004)

29
Old Theory HOS Model
  • Work with the classic 2x2x2 model
  • 2 factors K, L available in fixed
    inelastic supplies in 2 countries (H and F)
  • 2 goods X, Y produced according to CRTS
    production functions
  • All markets perfectly competitive (in labor
    market, this implies wages adjust to ensure full
    employment)

30
Key Equations
  • Factor Markets must clear
  • L0 LX LY aLXX aLYY
  • K0 KX KY aKXX aKYY
  • Product Markets must clear
  • PX aLXwx aKXrx
  • PY aLYwy aKYry
  • Implicit
  • wX wY and rX rY

31
Unit input requirements
Kj
akj
X(L,K)1
Lj
aLj
32
Adding Search
  • Key new assumption It takes time and effort for
    unemployed firms and firms with vacancies to find
    each other
  • Extension will be based on Mortensen and
    Pissarides (1994) earlier work (DMM 1988 Hosios
    1989) was a special case of this model

33
Basic Structure
  • Fixed supply of L and K in two countries (H
    and F)
  • Two goods X and Y
  • L can search for a job in either sector
  • L chooses a sector to search in order to max exp
    lifetime income

34
Basic Structure
  • Each entrepreneur owns one unit of K and can
    create one vacancy in either sector
  • Vacancies are created to max exp lifetime profit
  • Each firm employs at most one worker
  • For simplicity, assume that each filled vacancy
    results in one unit of output

35
Job Creation
  • mj(uj,vj) new jobs created in sector j depends
    on searching workers and open vacancies
  • Empirical work suggests matching function
    characterized by CRTS
  • Tj vj/uj measures labor market tightness

36
Job Creation
  • m(u,v)/u m(?) rate at which unemp. workers
    find new jobs
  • m(?) gt 0
  • m(u,v)/v m(?)/? z(?) rate at which
    vacancies are filled
  • z(?) lt 0

37
Job Destruction
  • Employed workers in sector j quit if they expect
    to earn more searching in sector i
  • Firms in sector j fire workers if they expect to
    earn more creating a vacancy in sector j
  • There is also involuntary separation that occurs
    at rate d

38
Asset Value Equations
Solve for VU, take ?t to zero, we get rVU b
pVE VU This is the general form for asset
value equations
39
Asset Value Equations (Workers)
  • ?Vju b mj(?j)Vje Vju
  • ?Vje wj djVju Vje
  • In equilibrium, we must have
  • VXu VYu

40
Asset Value Equation (Firms)
  • ?VXv - cx zx(?x)VXf VXv
  • ?VXf px wx - cx dxVXv VXf
  • In equilibrium, we must have
  • VXv VYv
  • Some versions of the model have free entry, in
    which case we also have
  • VXv VYv 0

41
Wage Determination
  • Frictions create market power on both sides of
    the labor market wages must be negotiated --
    Use Generalized Nash Cooperative Bargaining
    Solution
  • Can show that we get
  • wx ßpx cx (1 ß)rVXu
  • ß denotes labors share of surplus
  • Only one value for ß leads to efficiency (talk
    about externalities)

42
Factor Market Clearing
  • L0 X Y ux uy
  • K0 X Y vx vy
  • Steady-state conditions
  • djX mj(?j)ux for j X,Y

43
Factor Market Clearing
  • Using ss conditions we can rewrite as L0 aLXX
    aLYY
  • K0 aKXX aKYY
  • The a terms are similar to the a terms from the
    standard model they measure unit input
    requirements taking into account unemployed
    factors of production

44
Unit input req. with search
aLX 1 (uX/X) aKX 1 (vX/X) If equilibrium
is technically efficient, agents are allocated
across sectors so that each unit of X is
production at minimum cost (in terms of foregone
production of Y), taking into account the
matching process
45
Unit input req. with search
  • Equilibrium values determined by labor and
    capital sorting across sectors to equalize the
    expected return from search and vacancy creation
  • Key question Is this sorting optimal? (usually
    no externalities present)

46
Product Market Clearing
  • SS equations along with asset value equations
    imply that
  • Px aLx?VXu aKx?VXv
  • Py aLy?VYu aKy?VYv
  • To make comparison easier, define
  • wju ?Vju rjv ?Vjv

47
Equilibrium with Search
  • L0 aLXX aLYY
  • K0 aKXX aKYY
  • Px aLxwXu aKxrXv
  • Py aLywYu aKyrYv
  • wXu wYu rXv rYv

48
Comparison
  • Remarkably similar structure
  • Two key differences
  • Unit input requirements take into account
    unemployed factors (are they optimal?)
  • In pricing equation, it is the return to
    unemployed factors that show up
  • In Part 2, we explore the implications
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