The Basics
- Simple definition: The three main types of unemployment are frictional (between jobs), structural (skills mismatch), and cyclical (due to recessions).
- Core idea: Different causes, different cures.
- Think of it as: Three flavors of joblessness – temporary, mismatched, and economy-wide.
What It Actually Means
Frictional unemployment: Short-term, normal turnover – workers searching for the best jobs, firms searching for the best workers. Considered healthy, even necessary. Structural unemployment: Mismatch between workers’ skills and available jobs, or geographical mismatch. Caused by technological change, industry decline, and globalization. Long-term, requires retraining, mobility, and education. Cyclical unemployment Due to insufficient aggregate demand during recessions. Workers are being laid off, and firms are not hiring. Temporary if policy responds. Natural rate = frictional + structural.
Example
In Pakistan, fresh graduates are searching for first jobs (frictional). Textile workers lack IT skills while tech jobs go unfilled (structural). COVID-19 lockdowns are causing widespread layoffs (cyclical). Each requires different policy – job matching services, training programs, or stimulus.
Why It Matters
Understanding types prevents wrong policy responses. Stimulus won’t fix structural unemployment; training won’t fix cyclical unemployment. Diagnosis first, then cure.
See also
Unemployment • Natural Rate • Labor Market • Okun’s Law • Phillips Curve
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