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Unemployment
Spain's experience
Among EU countries, Spain has the highest and most stubborn
unemployment rate, currently at 24%, and with an average of 19.8% for
the last decade. In Discussion Paper No. 1184, Research Fellow Juan
Dolado and Research Associate Juan Jimeno suggest that
Spanish unemployment results from a series of adverse shocks, compounded
by disinflationary policies and a system of labour market institutions
which has several flaws. Their main goal is to understand the sources of
these shocks and their transmission mechanism. To do so, they build a
simple model consisting of three equations for aggregate supply,
aggregate demand and a policy rule. Solving the model yields two
equations for the unemployment rate and deviations of inflation from
target inflation in terms of lagged unemployment, deviations of expected
inflation from target inflation, and factor shifts in the price and wage
equation. The key parameters governing the system are those associated
with hysteresis, the degree of accommodation in monetary policy, the
real wage resistance and nominal rigidity. Gauging reasonable values for
these parameters, the authors are able to match some of the observed
features
The authors find that the current state of affairs derives from an
unfortunate combination of a series of events. Many inefficiencies
inherited from the old autocratic system were bound to be reformed, but
unfortunately the political reform coincided with the two oil price
shocks. To offset the initial rise in unemployment, a neo-corporatist
arrangement (social pacts) were implemented. These arrangements
generally operated in favour of capital and the otherwise unemployed and
against the interests of the employed (particularly skilled workers). In
order to ensure the unions' participation in the agreement, the
government provided much more generous welfare benefits and maintained
employment protection from the past. This led to an increasing
divergence between the employed and the unemployed, with the state
inheriting an irreversible increase in social security outlays. In these
circumstances, adverse shocks to the economy trigger undesirable
adjustments. Employment destruction takes place in big chunks. In
addition, more inactive people means less tax revenue, more benefits to
be paid and, consequently, higher tax rates and non-wage costs. This
causes further inactivity and an increase in the fiscal wedge, thereby
lessening the incentive to create jobs.
Why is Spanish Unemployment So High?
Juan J Dolado and Juan F Jimeno
Discussion Paper No. 1184, May 1995 (HR)
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