The Basics
- Simple definition: The unemployment rate that exists when the economy is at full employment, consisting of frictional and structural unemployment only.
- Core idea: Even a healthy economy has some unemployment – people between jobs, skills mismatches.
- Think of it as: The unavoidable minimum unemployment given the economy’s structure.
What It Actually Means
The natural rate (also NAIRU – non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment) is the rate consistent with stable inflation. Below it, inflation accelerates; above it, inflation falls. It’s not fixed – changes with demographics, technology, institutions, and policies. Includes frictional (search time) and structural (mismatch) unemployment, not cyclical. Estimated around 5-6% in developed countries, likely higher in developing countries with structural challenges.
Example
If Pakistan’s natural rate is estimated at 6%, unemployment at 4% would cause rising inflation; at 8%, inflation would fall. Policymakers aim to keep unemployment near the natural rate – low enough to avoid waste, high enough to avoid accelerating inflation.
Why It Matters (2026)
Central banks target unemployment relative to the natural rate to set policy. Mis-estimating the natural rate leads to policy errors. Pakistan’s high structural unemployment makes natural rate estimation difficult.
See also
Unemployment • Frictional Unemployment • Structural Unemployment • Cyclical Unemployment • Phillips Curve
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