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by Geoffrey M. B. Tootell
January/Februrary 1990
European economic performance has been disappointing
in the 1980s. High unemployment has been a dominant
policy issue, but in order to react properly, government
authorities had to determine the causes of this unemployment.
If inadequate aggregate demand were the source, expansionary
fiscal or monetary policy could help to solve the problem;
on the other hand, if movements in labor supply were
to blame, traditional macro policy would be ineffective.
European officials clearly leaned toward the labor supply
explanation, as aggregate deman policy remained conservative
throughout the decade.
The predominant empirical literature in the mid-1980s
seemed to prescribe this conservative approach. This
article updates these studies. Using their methodology,
the author shows that labor supply movements alone cannot
explain the unemployment that occurred over most of
the decade. An alternative approach suggests one possible
answer, that the formation in 1979 of the European Monetary
System unexpectedly tightened macroeconomic policy throughout
Europe.
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