Okun’s law is empirically robust but presents modelling problems, researchers say
Standard models must revise approach to links between finance and labour markets, authors say
Okun's law is a robust modelling tool, which held empirically in many economies worldwide, including some in the eurozone, during and after the financial crisis, a team of researchers has argued. But, say the authors of an occasional paper published by the European Central Bank (ECB) on August 10, the relationship is "surprisingly difficult" to recreate in structural models. Macroeconomic modellers need to find more sophisticated ways of simulating how financial frictions affect the labour
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