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The Labor Market Chapter 29
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The Labor Market Supply of labor – number of people willing to work at different wage-levels Demand for labor – number of workers needed by companies at different wage levels Chapter 29 2
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Employment Measures Unemployment Rate Average Work Week Chapter 29 3
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The Labor Market Labor market determines real wages Chapter 29 4
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The Labor Market Chapter 29 5
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Determinants of Labor Demand Product demand Productivity A change in price of substitutes of labor (machines) Chapter 29 6
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Labor Demand Regardless of how many people are willing to work, it is up to employers to decide the demand for labor. Chapter 29 7
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Derived Demand The demand for labor and other factors of production depend on the demand for final goods and services. Chapter 29 8
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The Labor-Demand Curve The number of workers hired is not completely dependent upon the demand for the product. The quantity of labor demanded also depends on its price (the wage rate). Chapter 29 9
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The Labor-Demand Curve Marginal Physical Product (MPP) is the change in total output associated with one additional unit of input. Marginal Revenue Product (MRP) - the change in total revenue associated with one additional unit of input. Chapter 29 10
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MRC – Marginal Resource Cost If a firm hires a new employee at a higher wage, they must increase wages of existing workers to preserve morale. Thus, it costs more than just the 1 person’s wages to hire a person Chapter 29 11
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The Hiring Decision Marginal revenue product determines how much labor will be hired. This is a MC < MB situation. Chapter 29 12
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Forecasting Work Requirements 1. Determine expected production for department for specific time period 10,000 T-shirts per month 2. Determine how many labor hours it will take to meet production goal Each worker makes 10/hr 10,000/10 = 1000 hours 3. Convert work hours to work days With 8 hr shifts 1000/8 = 125 days 4. Divide needed workdays by workdays-per-period With 20 workdays/month 125/20 = 6.25 people Chapter 29 13
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Forecasting Work Requirements 5. Make allowances for absences, training, and leaves Round up to 7 people 6. Search for other ways to meet your schedule i.e. overtime, transfers, borrow employees, temps instead of 7 line workers to do 6.25 work, hire 6 & work a little overtime Chapter 29 14
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Staffing Goal Your goal: make sure employees on hand matches workload Chapter 29 15
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Overstaffing Costs increase Flexibility increase Efficiency drops Coaching & training opportunities may be taken Chapter 29 16
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Understaffing Can get you behind schedule Costs may end up higher as you try to make up the difference Can bring out creativity Chapter 29 17
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Incentives to Hire Changes in Productivity More work from each worker Changes in Product Price More money from each item sold Chapter 29 18
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Labor Supply The willingness and ability to work specific amounts of time at alternative wage rates in a given time period. Chapter 29 19
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Determinants of Labor Supply Work conditions Benefits A change in price of goods & services Chapter 29 20
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Income vs. Leisure The opportunity cost of working is the amount of leisure time that must be given up in the process. Higher wage rates are needed to compensate for the increasing opportunity cost of labor. The marginal utility of income may decline as you earn more. Chapter 29 21
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Wages Nominal Wages – amount of money received per hour, day, week, month or year Real Wages – purchasing power of nominal wage – the goods & services you can buy Depends on nominal wages and prices of goods & services Chapter 29 22
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Real Wages If nominal wage increases 8% in a year and prices increase 5% in the same year, real income increased 3%. An increase in Productivity increases real wages. Real wage increases leads to inflation. Chapter 29 23
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Substitution Effect of Wages An increased wage rate encourages people to work more hours A worker might also respond to higher wage rates by working less, not more. Chapter 29 24
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Income Effect of Wages An increased wage rate allows a person to reduce hours worked without losing income. Chapter 29 25
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An Individual’s Labor Supply Chapter 29 26
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Market Labor Supply The market labor supply is the total quantity of labor that workers are willing and able to supply at alternative wage rates in a given time period. The labor supply curve shifts when the determinates of labor supply change. Chapter 29 27
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Shifts in Market Supply Over time, the labor supply curve has shifted leftward: A rise in living standards. Income transfer programs that provide economic security when not working. Increased diversity and attractiveness of leisure activities. Chapter 29 28
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Institutional Constraints A worker’s responsiveness to wage changes is often constrained by institutional constraints such as specified work hours such as 8 – 5 shifts. Chapter 29 29
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Monopsony The firm has monopolistic hiring power Company employs large portion of labor for the area Labor force is relatively immobile The firm becomes a wage-setter: ▪ work here or starve Chapter 29 30
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Ologopsony 3 or 4 firms in the area They could compete using high wages to attract the best labor They could cooperate & secretly set low wages. (incentive to cheat) Chapter 29 31
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Unions Unions were formed to counter monopsony power. Collective bargaining to force employers to improve wages & work conditions Higher wages unions bring may lead to higher unemployment Chapter 29 32
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Minimum Wage The lowest hourly wage an employer is allowed to pay a worker. Currently for the U.S. = $7.25/hr. Individual States Individual States Chapter 29 33 Source: www.dol.gov
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Minimum Wage $7.25 x 40 hours = $290/week $290 x 4.3 weeks = $1,250/month $290 x 50 weeks = $14,500/year Chapter 29 34
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Case Against Raising Minimum Wage Wages must be raised for many workers. Causes unemployment Helps teenagers rather than low-skilled workers Chapter 29 35
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Case For Raising Minimum Wage Removes monopsony power – all companies are paying better Higher wages leads to increased labor supply Higher wages leads to increased sales & more jobs Increase in productivity will offset the extra wages paid – happy workers! Chapter 29 36
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Satisfaction According to Maslow: job satisfaction and job dissatisfaction are not opposites. Job Dissatisfaction comes from pay & benefits meeting basic needs of survival & safety Job Satisfaction is determined by the work itself meeting upper-level psychological needs: Affiliation, Power & achievement. Chapter 29 37
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Efficiency Wage A company’s wages are above the equilibrium wage. The theory: Increase in productivity will offset the extra wages paid Increased loyalty Reduced absenteeism & tardiness More choice in workers Chapter 29 38
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Efficiency Wage Chapter 29 39
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Efficiency Wage In Practice Temporary effect only Lowers employment Chapter 29 40
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Efficiency Wage Result Chapter 29 41 New S S
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Wage Differentials Different jobs pay different wages Determined by supply & demand of skills Almost everyone can cook French Fries Few people can hit baseballs like Albert Pujols Since there are fewer homerun hitters, the supply is low, thus wages are high. The “Superstar” effect Chapter 29 42
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Income Profiles Chapter 29 43 Source: Economics by Boyes & Melvin
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College Income Premium (ratio) Chapter 29 44 Source: Economics by Boyes & Melvin
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Human Capital Why go though 8 years of Medical school (& buy malpractice insurance) to become a doctor if you will make the same money as a used car salesman? You want the smartest people to become doctors (job is important) so you give incentives. Chapter 29 45
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Employment Discrimination Employer Limits pool of workers to choose from – must pay higher wages Worker May not want to work with people of other race/sex. Leads to lower wage. Consumer May have preference for who serves them – this leads to higher prices Chapter 29 46
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