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chevron_left Natural rate of unemployment: The level of unemployment arising from structural and frictional factors. chevron_right

Natural rate of unemployment: The level of unemployment arising from structural and frictional factors.
Niki Mozby
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calendar_month2026-02-16

The Natural Rate of Unemployment

When the economy is healthy but still has some jobless people
📌 Summary: The natural rate of unemployment is the level of joblessness that exists even when the economy is doing well. It is caused by frictional unemployment (people moving between jobs) and structural unemployment (mismatch between workers' skills and job requirements). This rate is always above zero and is a normal part of a dynamic economy. Keywords: natural rate, frictional factors, structural factors, full employment.

1. Frictional vs. Structural Unemployment

The natural rate is made up of two components that are always present in a changing world. Think of it like a busy airport: even when all flights are running on time, some planes are always taxiing to the gate (frictional) and some runways might be built for different types of planes (structural).

TypeCauseExample
FrictionalTime it takes to find a new job (short-term)A recent high school graduate looking for their first job.
StructuralMismatch of skills or location (longer-term)Factory workers who need to learn coding for new tech jobs.

2. Real-World Example: The Smartphone Revolution

Imagine it is the year 2008. The first smartphones are becoming popular. Frictional unemployment happens as workers leave old landline phone companies to look for jobs at new tech firms like Apple or Samsung. Structural unemployment happens when a worker who used to install telephone poles doesn't know how to design mobile apps. They are unemployed not because there are no jobs, but because they lack the new skills. The economy's natural rate rises temporarily until workers are retrained.

đź§  Formula Insight: Economists don't have a perfect formula, but they often say: Natural Rate of Unemployment = Frictional Unemployment + Structural Unemployment. This excludes cyclical unemployment, which is caused by economic recessions.

3. Important Questions

âť“ Q1: Is the natural rate always the same?
A: No, it changes over time. For example, if a country improves its job-matching websites (like LinkedIn), frictional unemployment can go down. If technology changes very fast, structural unemployment might go up.
âť“ Q2: What does "full employment" mean?
A: It does not mean zero unemployment. It means the economy is producing at its potential, and the only unemployment left is the natural rate (frictional + structural).
âť“ Q3: Can the government lower the natural rate?
A: Yes, by funding education and training programs (to fix structural issues) and by providing better job information services (to fix frictional delays).
✅ Conclusion: The natural rate of unemployment is like the idle time of a pizza oven between orders—it is normal and even necessary. It shows that people have the freedom to look for better jobs (frictional) and that the economy is evolving, even if that means some workers need to learn new things (structural). Understanding this helps us see that not all unemployment is bad or a sign of a broken economy.

📝 Footnote

[1] Frictional unemployment: Short-term unemployment that occurs when people are between jobs or entering the workforce for the first time.
[2] Structural unemployment: A long-term form of unemployment caused by a mismatch between the skills workers have and the skills needed for available jobs.
[3] Cyclical unemployment: Unemployment directly related to downturns in the business cycle (recessions), which is not part of the natural rate.

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