Abstract
The article assesses the empirical validity of Okun's law on the relationship between a country's unemployment and its output with a focus upon the Visegrád Group economies and upon the post-transition period from the first quarter of 2000 until the first quarter of 2016. The study also accounts for cyclical fluctuations in male and female unemployment and applies different approaches to the estimation of Okun coefficients. Fixed long-run Okun coefficients are compared to the trajectories identified under the state space approach based on the Kalman filter in an attempt to capture their possible time non-constancy. The findings cast doubt about the universal validity of Okun's law in the Visegrád countries in the investigated period.
Notes
1 For a summary of these variants, see Moosa (Citation1999, pp. 293–94).
2 Available at: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat, accessed 1 June 2016.
3 Elasticity of employment and unemployment is a terminus technicus in economics, see: ‘What is Employment Elasticity? How low Employment Elasticity in India results in Jobless Growth?’, GK Today, 1 January 2018, available at: https://www.gktoday.in/gk/what-is-employment-elasticity-how-low-employment-elasticity-in-india-results-in-jobless-growth/, accessed 13 March 2019.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Martin Boďa
MARTIN BOĎA, Faculty of Economics, Matej Bel University in Banská Bystrica, Tajovského 10, 975 90 Banská Bystrica, Slovak Republic.
Mariana Považanová
MARIANA POVAŽANOVÁ, Faculty of Economics, Matej Bel University in Banská Bystrica, Tajovského 10, 975 90 Banská Bystrica, Slovak Republic. Email: [email protected]