Apres Le Non
Charles Paul Freund | May 31, 2005, 8:01pm
In France, Raffarin is out as PM, and Dominique "Veto" de Villepin is in. His mission: fix French unemployment while protecting the French economy from "Anglo-Saxon" ideas about markets.
"This struggle requires national mobilization," President Chirac told the French in a televised address. "It will be enacted resolutely in accordance with the French model and not the Anglo-Saxon type of model . . ." The French model, as David Ignatius has pointed out, is to strive to "maintain inflexible management and labor unions, six-week vacations, a 35-hour workweek," etc. The nation's unemployment rate has been about 10 percent for some 15 years.
TheRev | June 1, 2005, 2:52am | #
For the sake of fairness (and the greater goal of avoiding real work) I thought I'd try to dig up a non-US source of unemployment rates by countries.
Internationally comparable Labor Force Participation Rate is a bit hard to find, but ye olde trusty UN (who says they're good for nothing?) does have labor force profiles for all the UN countries. Included in this profile is a Total Economic Activity Rate, which is a measure of labor force participation by the whole population.
According to the UN, the US has a Total Economic Activity Rate of 50 (I assume percent).
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/cdbdemo/cdb_country_prof_results.asp?crID=840&cpID=12
That seems mighty low, maybe it's that high incarceration rate you referred to earlier.
Now to France, which boasts a Total Economic Activity Rate of...44
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/cdbdemo/cdb_country_prof_results.asp?crID=250&cpID=12
This should not be construed to infer a complete picture, you'd need to factor in age distribution (France is weighted a bit more towards prime working ages than the US), Unreported jobs (black market, under the table, etc., search me how the two compare), median wage, etc.
But, a cursory look at the data seems to show what many would guess, the labor force participation rate is relatively comparable (though by no means close), but those without jobs are less likely to be looking for a new one.
Oh Economics, master of proving what everyone already knew.