4.4 Article

A spatial econometric multivariate model of Okun's law

Journal

REGIONAL SCIENCE AND URBAN ECONOMICS
Volume 93, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2021.103756

Keywords

GDP growth; Unemployment; Region; Spatial econometrics; Impulse responses

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A system of two dynamic spatial panel data model equations is developed to examine the interdependence between output growth and the change in the unemployment rate. The model's parameters are estimated using recently developed maximum likelihood techniques for multivariate spatial econometric models, with data from twelve provinces in the Netherlands spanning the period 1974-2018 and covering four major economic downturns. The study finds that the relationship from output growth to unemployment dominates Okun's law, and the reduction of unemployment by one percentage point depends on the consideration of spillover effects and output multiplier effects in neighboring regions.
A system of two dynamic spatial panel data model equations is developed in which output growth and the change in the unemployment rate are interdependent. The parameters of the model are estimated by recently developed maximum likelihood techniques for multivariate spatial econometric models, using data of twelve provinces in the Netherlands over the period 1974-2018, covering four major economic downturns of the Dutch economy. By using time-cumulative marginal effects derived from the impulse response function of this model, it is found that Okun's law is dominated by the relationship that runs from output growth to unemployment. The amount of growth that is needed to reduce unemployment by one percentage point is shown to depend on the extent to which spillover effects to neighboring regions and output multiplier effects are accounted for.

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