Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
How are changes in discount rates transmitted to unemployment, and are they a quantitatively relevant driver of the Great Recession? In this paper I answer these questions using a search and matching model featuring endogenous capital accumulation. Rising discount rates have a direct effect on unemployment, since hiring is an investment activity for firms in the presence of search frictions, and an indirect effect, since a rise in discounts reduces investment in capital, reducing the marginal product of labour and hence incentives to hire. I estimate changes in discount rates during the Great Recession using data on both stock markets and investment. Discounts measured from the stock market increase by more but recover faster, while discounts for capital investment increase by less but more persistently. Combined, the two discount measures can account for 52% of the peak rise in unemployment during the Great Recession. Finally, while capital discounts affect unemployment by changing labour productivity, their importance cannot be inferred from observed movements in labour productivity alone, and capital discounts raised unemployment even while observed labour productivity was rising.