ELM Part 2- Economic models Manuela Samek

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
23 CHAPTER At Full Employment: The Classical Model.
Advertisements

MACROECONOMICS What is the purpose of macroeconomics? to explain how the economy as a whole works to understand why macro variables behave in the way they.
Labor Market. Demand For a Factor Demand for factors is a derived demand. If the demand for the product rises, the demand for the factors used to produce.
Chapter 1: The Labor Market Labor Economics: Studies the determination of wages and employment and the resulting income distribution. Most relevant to.
3.3 Labour Supply Assumptions of the Model
Chapter 5 Urban Growth. Purpose This chapter explores the determinants of growth in urban income and employment.
Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 6-1 CHAPTER 6 Building Blocks of the Flexible-Price Model.
Chapter 8 A roadmap ahead: So far we have studied how aggregate economic performance is defined and measured. In the next few chapters we will study the.
Chapter 6 Labour Market. Outline.  The perfectly competitive model of the labour market  Imperfect competition on the labour market  Further topics.
Aggregate Demand.
Chapter 3: Demand, Supply and Equilibrium
22 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
Part 9 Factor Markets Markets for factors of production: labour, capital, land (sometimes entrepreneurship is added) Physical capital and human capital.
Productivity, Output, and Employment
Chapter 18 The markets for the factors of production
MICROECONOMICS: Theory & Applications Chapter 2 Supply and Demand
Supply of Labor. Labor Supply Different questions to be asked: –Work or don’t work –Number of hours of work effort –Occupational choice –Locational choice.
Macroeconomics Chapter 91 Capital Utilization and Unemployment C h a p t e r 9.
The basic neoclassical model: Labour demand (1)
Ch. 17: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets Objectives – The firm’s choice of the quantities of labor and capital to employ. – People’s choices of the.
Labor Market Overview (Part 2). The Labor Market Labor markets determine –Terms of employment Earnings versus total compensation Working conditions –Levels.
Demand and Supply Market and the Economy Demand The Demand Curve Demand versus Quantity Demanded Supply Supply versus Quantity Supplied Market Equilibrium.
Extensions to the basic neoclassical model (relaxing the assumptions)/1 Heterogenous workers and jobs: wage differentials in the long run reflect differences.
Macroeconomics (ECON 1211) Lecturer: Dr B. M. Nowbutsing Topic: Unemployment.
Aggregate Demand (AD): Is the relationship between the general price level and total spending in the economy.
The Theory of Aggregate Supply Chapter 4. 2 The Theory of Production Representative Agent Economy: all output is produced from labor and capital and in.
Ch. 7. At Full Employment: The Classical Model
Chapter 30: The Labor Market Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 13e.
Inflation and Unemployment
Questions: (1) Where do the labor demand and supply curves come from? (2) How well do they explain the facts?
Chapter 16 Unemployment: Search and Efficiency Wages.
Chapter 9 Labor Economics. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.9-2 Learning Objectives Determine why the demand curve for labor.
Supply The Supply Curve Shifts of the Supply Curve Production and Cost CHAPTER 5.
BY THE END OF THIS UNIT YOU WILL BE ABLE TO EXPLAIN THE SHAPE OF THE SUPPLY OF LABOUR CURVE OUTLINE THE DETERMINATES OF THE SUPPLY OF LABOUR CURVE USE.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 13: Wages and Unemployment 1.Discuss the four important.
MICROECONOMICS: Theory & Applications By Edgar K. Browning & Mark A. Zupan John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 11th Edition, Copyright 2012 PowerPoint prepared by.
Introduction: Economic Issues Introduction: Economic Issues.
1 Ch. 7. At Full Employment: The Classical Model The relationship between the quantity of labor employed and real GDP What determines the full-employment.
How The Macro economy Works
Lecture 13: Expanding the Model with Labour Supply L11200 Introduction to Macroeconomics 2009/10 Reading: Barro Ch.8 22 February 2010.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Preview the aggregate supply-aggregate demand.
CHAPTER 9 The Economy at Full Employment CHAPTER 9 The Economy at Full Employment Chapter 26 in Economics Michael Parkin ECONOMICS 5e.
Chapter 2 Labor Supply Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
© 2008 Pearson Education Canada24.1 Chapter 24 Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis.
Household Behavior and Consumer Choice
Overview. Outline Some key definitions – institutions, markets and wedges – labor market states A simple static framework and the wedge Why institutions?
Lecture 1 Basic Economic Analysis. The Economic Framework For our purposes two basic sets of agents: –Consumers –Firms Both consumers and firms live within.
Factor Markets Frederick University Factor Markets Production Factors: Labor (L) Land (N) Capital (K)
Macroeconomics Chapter 81 An Equilibrium Business-Cycle Model C h a p t e r 8.
Markets Markets – exchanges between buyers and sellers. Supply – questions faced by sellers in those exchanges are related to how much to sell and at.
Chapter 1 Introduction to Labor Economics Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
124 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand. 125  What is the purpose of the aggregate supply-aggregate demand model?  What determines aggregate supply.
Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist 1 CHAPTER Supply and Demand Teach a parrot the terms supply and demand and you’ve got an economist. — Thomas Carlyle.
Chapter 3: Demand, Supply and Market Equilibrium.
The Labour Market Academic year 2015/16 Introduction to Economics Augusto Ninni.
Transparency 3-1 Chapter 3 Supply, Demand, and Price © West Publishing Company 1996.
Graphing using Demand & Supply Analysis Ch. 4,5,6 Economics.
Household Production and Life- Cycle and Labor Supply.
2.6 Aggregate Demand and the Level of Economic Activity What happens to a snowball as you continue to roll it?
7 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY CHAPTER.
Lecture 2 Part I: Introduction to Business economics Part II: Market forces of supply and demand Instructor: Prof.Dr.Qaisar Abbas Course code: ECO 400.
Chapter 6. Supply of Labor to the Economy Importance of Labor Supply 1) Any country ’ s well-being in the long run heavily depends on the willingness of.
Aggregate demand and aggregate supply. Lecture 6 1.
C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to Preview the aggregate supply-aggregate demand.
AS: How the macroeconomy works
The Labour Market.
MACROECONOMICS AND THE GLOBAL BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
3.3 Labour Supply Assumptions of the Model
Macroeconomics Chapter 9
Presentation transcript:

ELM Part 2- Economic models Manuela Samek References Adnett N. (1996) European Labour Markets, chapter 2.1,2.2; 4.2, 4.3;5.5,5.6;7.2,7.3,7.4 Blanchard O. (2006) European Unemployment, Economic Policy no.45 Jan.2006

Some questions looking for an answer The labour market performance of EU countries presents some problems which need to be addressed: Why the EU is not able to create enough jobs for its active population? What factors influence labour demand? Why participation and employment rates in some countries are very low especially for women and for the less educated? What factors influence labour supply? Why unemployment is so persistent, especially among some groups of the population? Why there are differences across countries? What is the role of labour market institutions? What policies may be introduced to improve the labour market performance of EU countries? Economic models try to answer to these questions

Economic models Economic models of labour supply help to explain labour supply decisions and differences in participation rates across different groups of the population. They also help explaining the influence of working hours regulation, the taxation and the welfare systems on labour supply decisions; Economic models of labour demand explain how firms decide if and how much labour to employ in the productive process. Models of labour demand with adjusting costs consider the relation between employment protection legislation and labour market performance; Search and matching models help the analysis of search behavior and the matching of labour demand and supply, in order to derive what variables affect unemployment duration and labour market mismatches; Wage determination models help to explain why wages are not flexible and what variables affect wage bargaining and its effects on the wage dynamics and structure. Human capital models help to explain why individuals invest in education and training an what are the individual and social returns of this investment.

THE ECONOMIC APPROACH TO THE LABOUR MARKET Main assumptions of the baseline neoclassical model (1) In the labour market buyers (firms, labour demand) and sellers (individuals, labour supply) of labour exchange labour services for pay. Wages are the price of labour services.  Agents (buyers and sellers) are rational: on the basis of their tastes and constraints they try to maximise their objective function. The objective of buyers (firms) is to maximise profits; the objective of sellers (individuals) is to maximise utility.  

Main assumptions of the baseline neoclassical model (2) Markets are competitive. There are many sellers and buyers which are price takers: they cannot affect wages or prices which are completely flexible and are set only by the movements of demand and supply. The equilibrium wage and price are those determined by the equality of demand and supply.  Individuals and firms are homogenous  Individuals and firms have a complete information on labour market conditions  There are no constraints to labour and firms’ mobility

Labour supply At the aggregate/macroeconomic level, labour supply is the results of the aggregation of individuals’ decisions relative to: Labour market participation Fertility decisions and migration flows which define the size of the working age population The labour force (LF) function/curve represents the size of the labour force at different levels of the real wage (W/P). We assume that aggregate participation increases with the real wage. At the microeconomic /individual level, labour supply is the result of the individual choice between work (which determines consumption possibilities) and leisure (which increases the well being of the individual). We assume that the individual may freely choose the amount of work to supply in the labour market.

LABOUR SUPPLY at the individual level (1) The labour supply function (Ls) represents the behaviour of the sellers of labour. It indicates the amount of work that individuals or households are willing to supply at each wage rate. Labour supply depends on: ·       Individual tastes and preferences ·       The real wage rate ·       Non labour income (which reflects the system of welfare support such as subsidies or unemployment benefits).

LABOUR SUPPLY at the individual level (2) The individual maximise her/his utility function (which depends on her/his preferences in relation to consumption and leisure and is represented by utility or indifference curves) under an income and time constraint (which depends on the income she/he may get either working or not and the time available)

LABOUR SUPPLY (3) On this basis decision to participate to the labour markets depends on the comparison between the (net of taxes) market real wage and the reservation wage. The individual participate only if the market wage is greater then the reservation wage. The reservation wage is the wage below which individuals do not wish to work. The reservation wage depends on non labour income and preferences. Changes in non-labour income and tastes shift the position of the supply curve, while changes in the real wage result in movements along the supply curve

Labour supply at the individual level

LABOUR SUPPLY (3) Any rise in the real wage (W/P) generates two opposite effects: a) the increase in the opportunity cost of leisure and home production generates a subsitution of work for leisure, so labour supply increases (substtituion effect) b) the increase in income will consent to “buy” more leisure and reduces labour supply (income effect) In the short run we assume that, given individuals’ preferences and non-labour income, the quantity of labour supplied is a positive function of the real wage (we assume that the substitution effect is higher than the income effect for a relevant range of wages)

Effect of an increase in real wage income effect > substitution effect

Effect of an increase in real wage income effect < substitution effect

LABOUR SUPPLY (4)  A rise in non labour income (such as unemployment benefits) reduces labour supply, by increasing the reservation wage All factors which affect the reservation wage and the market wage affect labour supply: family composition, welfare subsidies, taxes. But also employment and working time regulations affect labour supply, especially in the case of secondary workers (such as married women) . In household labour supply models, the secondary worker considers the primary worker’s wage as non labour income. Hence changes in the wage of one component of the household, affect not only his/her labour supply, but also the labour supply of other components.

Effects of subsidies (non labour income) on labour market participation

Individual labour supply curve

The effect of child care subsidies on labour market participation

Estimations of labour supply Usually labour supply is estimated using the following regression: L=0+ 1W+ 2X+ε Empirical studies show that usually: men labour supply is not sensible to changes in real wages (UNELASTIC) (the income effect compensate the substituion effect) Women labour supply is usually sensible to changes in real wages (ELASTIC) (the substituion effect is usually prevalent)

Tab 3.4

Extensions of the basic model Main extensions of the basic model: Household models to consider interactions among households components in labour supply decisions. These models are very useful to explain women labour supply. Life cycle models to considier the possibility of changes in preferences and market wages during the life cycle of individuals. Very useful to explain how labour supply changes with age Human capital models to consider the possibile interactions among consumption choices, investment in human capital and labour supply

Main predictions of economic models of labour supply Labour supply decisions reflect individual and household conditions, preferences, non labour income and market wages. The probability to participate to the labour market and hours supplied usually increase when: the market wage increases, but over a certain level of hours worked and market wage, further increases in wages may reduce hours worked; Non labour income declines; The costs to be undertaken in order to work decline, especially for secondary workers Restrictions on working hours oblige individuals to accept second best solutions and may reduce the labour supply of secondary workers, Taxation and welfare policies affect labour supply differently for the different components of the household