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    Decomposing the misery index: A dynamic approach

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    Publication date
    2014-12-13
    Author
    Cohen, I.K.
    Ferretti, F.
    McIntosh, Bryan
    Keyword
    Business cycle; Economic discomfort; Misery index; Okun's law; Phillips curve
    Rights
    © 2014 The Author(s). This open access article is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 3.0 license.
    Peer-Reviewed
    Yes
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    The misery index (the unweighted sum of unemployment and inflation rates) was probably the first attempt to develop a single statistic to measure the level of a population’s economic malaise. In this letter, we develop a dynamic approach to decompose the misery index using two basic relations of modern macroeconomics: the expectations-augmented Phillips curve and Okun’s law. Our reformulation of the misery index is closer in spirit to Okun’s idea. However, we are able to offer an improved version of the index, mainly based on output and unemployment. Specifically, this new Okun’s index measures the level of economic discomfort as a function of three key factors: (1) the misery index in the previous period; (2) the output gap in growth rate terms; and (3) cyclical unemployment. This dynamic approach differs substantially from the standard one utilised to develop the misery index, and allow us to obtain an index with five main interesting features: (1) it focuses on output, unemployment and inflation; (2) it considers only objective variables; (3) it allows a distinction between short-run and long-run phenomena; (4) it places more importance on output and unemployment rather than inflation; and (5) it weights recessions more than expansions.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10454/9907
    Version
    published version paper
    Citation
    Cohen IK, Ferretti F and McIntosh B (2016) Decomposing the misery index: A dynamic approach. Cogent Economics and Finance. 2.
    Link to publisher’s version
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2014.991089
    Type
    Article
    Collections
    Health Studies Publications

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