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We study the long-run relation between money (inflation or interest rates) and unemployment. We document positive relationships between these variables at low frequencies. We develop a framework where money and unemployment are modeled using explicit microfoundations, providing a unified theory to analyze labor and goods markets. We calibrate the model and ask how monetary factors account for labor market behavior. We can account for a sizable fraction of the increase in unemployment rates during the 1970s. We show how it matters whether one uses monetary theory based on the search-and-bargaining approach or on an ad hoc cash-in-advance constraint. (JEL E24, E31, E41, E43, E52)
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Aleksander Berentsen
Guido Menzio
Randall Wright
American Economic Review
University of Pennsylvania
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Berentsen et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dee9dd7702a00918b0d1e8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.101.1.371