Universitat Ramon Llull. IQS
2025-12
This paper empirically studies the relationship between credit and unemployment fluctuations in the U.S. economy for the period 1955–2023. Drawing on the business cycle literature that focuses on changes in output, we model unemployment dynamics using a Markov-switching framework extended with credit variables to assess the ability of credit to identify periods of labor market slack – instances where the unemployment rate exceeds its natural rate, exerting downward pressure on inflation. Our results show that contractions in real private credit carry valuable information for signaling labor market slack. Moreover, we find that cyclical variations in private credit have significant out-of-sample predictive power for labor market dynamics.
Article
Published version
English
Credit cycle; Unemployment; Forecast; Markov-switching; Crèdit; Atur; Previsió
p.15
Elsevier
Economic Analysis and Policy 2025, 88
IQS [794]