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Bart Hobijn

Researcher at Arizona State University

Publications -  165
Citations -  7637

Bart Hobijn is an academic researcher from Arizona State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Unemployment & Inflation. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 161 publications receiving 7046 citations. Previous affiliations of Bart Hobijn include Federal Reserve Bank of New York & Erasmus University Rotterdam.

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A Rising Natural Rate of Unemployment: Transitory or Permanent?

Abstract: The U.S. unemployment rate has remained stubbornly high since the 2007-2009 recession leading many to conclude that structural, rather than cyclical, factors are to blame. Relying on a standard job search and matching framework and empirical evidence from a wide array of labor market indicators, we examine whether the natural rate of unemployment has increased since the recession began, and if so, whether the underlying causes are transitory or persistent. Our analyses suggest that the natural rate has risen over the past several years, with our preferred estimate implying an increase from its pre-recession level of close to a percentage point. An assessment of the underlying factors responsible for this increase, including labor market mismatch, extended unemployment benefits, and uncertainty about overall economic conditions, implies that only a small fraction of this increase is likely to be persistent. Keywords: equilibrium unemployment, Beveridge curve, structural unemployment, mismatch JEL codes: E24, J3, J6. *Corresponding author (email: mary.daly@sf.frb.org). Daly, Hobijn, and Valletta are at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco; Sahin is with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The authors are grateful to Glenn Rudebusch and John Williams for their suggestions and comments. The views expressed in this paper are solely those of the authors and are not attributable to the Federal Reserve Banks of New York and San Francisco or the Federal Reserve System. This version covers data through August 20
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Job-Finding and Separation Rates in the OECD

TL;DR: This article provided comparable estimates of aggregate monthly job-finding and separation rates for twenty-seven OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries; these estimates can be used for the cross-country calibration of search models of unemployment.
Posted Content

What Will Homeland Security Cost

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantify the likely effects of homeland security expenditures on the U.S. economy and suggest that the total amount of public and private-sector spending will be relatively small: the annual direct costs of the homeland security efforts are estimated to be $72 billion, or 0.66 percent of GDP in 2003.
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A new approach to measuring technology with an application to the shape of the diffusion curves

TL;DR: This paper documents the sources and measures of the cross-country historical adoption technology (CHAT) data set and finds that, once the intensive margin is measured, technologies do not diffuse in a logistic way.
Posted Content

Five Facts You Need to Know About Technology Diffusion

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a new data set on the diffusion of about 115 technologies in over 150 countries over the last 200 years, and used this comprehensive data set to uncover general patterns of technology diffusion.