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Public
Policy Brief No. 05-2
by Katharine Bradbury
This public policy brief examines labor force participation
rates in this recession and recovery and compares them with
the cyclical patterns in earlier business cycles. Measured
relative to the business cycle peak in March 2001, labor force participation
rates almost four
years later have not recovered as much as usual, and the discrepancies are large.
Among age-by-sex groups, the participation shortfall is
especially pronounced at young and prime ages: Only for men
and women age 55 and
older has participation risen more than is
usual four years after the business cycle peak.
The brief examines explanations and different recovery scenarios
for various groups—older workers, women, teens. Depending on the scenario,
the current labor force shortfall ranges from 1.6 million
to 5.1 million men and women. With 7.9 million people currently
unemployed, the addition of these hypothetical participants
would raise the unemployment rate by 1 to 3-plus percentage
points. Current low rates of labor market participation thus
potentially represent considerable slack in the U.S. labor
market.
This brief is based on materials presented in briefings
to the President and Academic Advisory Council of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston in March and April 2005.
Full-text brief 
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