00:01
So here we have a story with 500 people in the labor course.
00:05
And we have a very interesting structure of unemployment.
00:08
So if we look at unemployment over time, right, we at the beginning of time, we have five people lose their jobs, right? there are five people unemployed in this month.
00:21
Then for each month, three, four, five, six, we have five more people who are five people who are unemployed, five people who are unemployed, five people who are unemployed, and five people who are unemployed.
00:38
We also have 20 people who remain unemployed for six months, right? so we've got these short spells of unemployment overlapping with these long spells of unemployment, right? what is the unemployment rate? so a, the unemployment rate is equal to, the number of unemployed over the number of people in the labor force.
01:07
And in say a typical month, that's a bad way.
01:10
I should like here, you see at any given month, there will be five short term unemployed and 25 long term unemployed.
01:18
So there'll be 20 long term, five short term relative to the labor force as a whole.
01:24
That gives you an unemployment rate of 5%...