Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Software Requirements and Opening a Macro-Enhanced Workbook
- Introduction:Why Simulation and Excel?
- 1 Charting in Excel
- 2 Economic Growth Literacy
- 3 The Solow Model
- 4 Macro Data with FRED in Excel
- 4.1 Introduction: FRED.xla
- 4.2 GDP: GDP.xls
- 4.3 Unemployment: Unem.xls
- 4.4 Inflation: Inflation.xls
- 4.5 Money: Money.xls
- 5 The Keynesian Model
- References
4.3 - Unemployment: Unem.xls
from 4 - Macro Data with FRED in Excel
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2016
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Software Requirements and Opening a Macro-Enhanced Workbook
- Introduction:Why Simulation and Excel?
- 1 Charting in Excel
- 2 Economic Growth Literacy
- 3 The Solow Model
- 4 Macro Data with FRED in Excel
- 4.1 Introduction: FRED.xla
- 4.2 GDP: GDP.xls
- 4.3 Unemployment: Unem.xls
- 4.4 Inflation: Inflation.xls
- 4.5 Money: Money.xls
- 5 The Keynesian Model
- References
Summary
The outstanding faults of the economic society in which we live are its failure to provide for full employment and its arbitrary and inequitable distribution of wealth and incomes.
– John Maynard KeynesQuick Summary
To access Unem.xls, visit
http://www.depauw.edu/learn/macroexcel/excelworkbooks/Data/Unem.xls.
Unem.xls explains how to use the FRED Excel add-in to access labor market data. The focus is on understanding basic concepts (such as the unemployment rate and the labor force participation rate) and becoming aware of a few labor market facts, including the current state of the economy. Additional topics include seasonal adjustment, sampling, and a simple job search model.
Screencasts
• http://vimeo.com/econexcel/unemintro: download data on the unemployment rate and plot it (with recession bars); other variables are downloaded and basic definitions are illustrated with the data
• http://vimeo.com/econexcel/unemgroups: download unemployment data on various subgroups and illustrate that the impact of unemployment on particular categories of people is extremely variable
• http://vimeo.com/econexcel/unemseasonaladj: Excel's PivotTable tool is used to find the monthly average in seasonally adjusted and not seasonally adjusted unemployment rates to show the seasonal pattern in the data
• http://vimeo.com/econexcel/unemlfpr: download data on the labor force participation rate and show the striking difference in men's and women's LFPR since World War II
• http://vimeo.com/econexcel/unemsampling: explains the idea of sampling variability by sampling from a hypothetical population in Excel and using simulation to show the results from many samples
• http://vimeo.com/econexcel/unemsearch: implements and solves a fixed sample search model with Monte Carlo simulation
Introduction
FRED provides access to data from the Current Population Survey (CPS), which is the source of labor market measures such as unemployment and labor force participation rates. It also includes international measures of unemployment rates, harmonized for equivalent definitions of job search, from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Although not covered here, FRED also serves up data from Current Employment Statistics (CES, which is also known as the establishment survey) and the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS). Thus, the FRED Excel add-in offers easily available, timely information on a wide variety of labor market indicators.
Definitions of variables and details on household surveys are left to textbooks and lecture notes. The Intro sheet contains a minimal review, including a layout of the framework used to organize various states of labor market activity and a few basic definitions.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Teaching Macroeconomics with Microsoft Excel® , pp. 119 - 124Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016