A Review of Unemployment
THE THICK VOLUME under review, by Richard Layard, Stephen Nickell, and Richard Jackman, is an extensive econometric and theoretical study, using time-series and cross section data, of the central tendency of the unemployment rate and its fluctuations in 19 OECD countries since the mid-50s. It thus joins the company of several recent macroeconometric studies of employment determination using international time-series data. Of these it is easily the most far-ranging study to date though in its microscopic examination of social legislation it has somehow neglected a range of macro factors right under its nose. Readers will find an abundance of arresting claims and provocative positions to keep the critical juices flowing. For me the volume is significant not (or hardly at all) as an assemblage of particular modelings and findings but primarily as an early econometric expression of the paradigm shift we are now witnessing in macroeconomics. Once nearly made extinct by a neoclassical winter, a school of economists are today furiously at work on unemployment considered as an equilibrium phenomenon' springing from en-