Publications

Public Policy Brief No. 53 | July 1999

Full Employment Has Not Been Achieved

Full Employment Policy: Theory and Practice

Claims that the nation has reached full employment take for granted the need for a reserve pool of labor to maintain price stability and labor market flexibility. But are millions of jobless and underemployed workers the best we can do in these times of economic expansion? And what will happen when the inevitable downturn comes? Reduction of the workweek and employment subsidies have been proposed to achieve higher employment, but neither is sure to raise employment and both may have serious side effects. A public service employment program that offers jobs at a fixed wage to all who are willing and able to work can provide full employment without inflationary pressures and with labor market flexibility, preserve workers’ skills, contribute valuable public services, and be relatively inexpensive.


Publication Highlight

Working Paper No. 1058
The Origins of the Platonic Approach to Monetary Systems
Retracing European and Chinese Monetary Thoughts on Chartalism, Nominalism, and the Origins of Monetary Systems
Author(s): Éric Tymoigne
November 2024

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