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Chapter 15-1 Chapter Fifteen Wage and Employment Determination Under Collective Bargaining Modeified from slides created by: Erica Morrill
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Chapter 15-2 Chapter Focus Union behaviour Interaction between firms and unions Inefficient production decisions Inefficient union practices Bargaining power
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Chapter 15-3 Theory of Union Behaviour Unions attempt to maximize objectives given economic constraints Ability to characterize preferences of unions is difficult
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Chapter 15-4 Union Objectives Utility is a positive function of wage rate (W) and employment (E): u(W,E) Indifference curve is downward sloping higher wage is needed to compensate for lower employment Curves have a convex shape diminishing marginal rate of substitution
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Chapter 15-5 DLDL Figure 15.1 Union Objectives and Constraints Real Wage Rate WPWP WaPWaP Employment E a2a2 a1a1 U0U0 a3a3 U2U2 a0a0 U1U1
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Chapter 15-6 Special Cases of Objective Functions Maximize the Wage rate indifference curves are horizontal straight lines Maximize Employment indifference curves are vertical straight lines Maximize the (real) wage bill Indifference curve is downward sloping and convex to the origin (disregards alternative wage rate) Maximize economic rent curve out from the intersection of alternative wage Maximize total union utility: Lu(w)+(N-L)u(Wa).
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Chapter 15-7 Additional Considerations Deriving union objectives is simplest when: preferences are homogeneous leaders are constrained by democratic decision-making processes union membership is exogenously determined
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Chapter 15-8 Monopoly Union Model Unions negotiate wages taking into account the consequences The firm decides the employment level maximizing profits given W set by the union, which yield the demand for labor function, D L. D L curve is analogous to a budget constraint Program: Max u(W,E), subject to D L curve Equilibrium is the tangent of the iso-utility curve and D L curve
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Chapter 15-9 Firms Iso-profit Curves Combinations of wage and employment of equal profits, . Higher profits on lower curves Firm cannot pay wages below the alternative wage Wage will lie between the alternative wage rate and the bargaining wage
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Chapter 15-10 Figure 15.4 The Firm’s and Union’s Preferred Wage-Employment Outcomes E W DLDL U* IuIu 0 =0 W0W0 WuWu ** IfIf W f = W a
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Chapter 15-11 Relaxing the Demand Constraint Union’s attempt to alter the constraint in their favor increasing labour demand (thus increasing E) making demand more inelastic (thus resulting in higher W and minor job loss) Restricting substitution possibilities collective bargaining influencing public policy Influence product market supporting quotas, tariffs and restrictions on foreign competition
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Chapter 15-12 Efficient Wage and Employment Contracts Negotiating over wage and employment is mutually advantageous Pareto-efficient wage-employment outcomes union’s indifference curve tangent to the firms iso-profit curve
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Chapter 15-13 Figure 15.5 Efficient and Inefficient Wage- Employment Contracts DLDL A W E B A’ A’’ C C’ Wa
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Chapter 15-14 Contract Curve Locus of the Pareto-efficient wage- employment outcomes Union cares about wages and employment CC must lie to the right of D L curve Firms and unions are better off negotiating an outcome on the contract curve Moving up on the CC makes unions better off Moving down makes the firm better off
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Chapter 15-15 Efficient Versus Inefficient Contracts Monopoly union model (inefficient) firm unilaterally sets employment Contract curve (efficient) negotiate over wage and employment
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Chapter 15-16 Figure 15.6 Inefficient and Efficient Contracts E W C’ C DLDL
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Chapter 15-17 Theory of Bargaining Predicting the outcome and explaining depend factors Common features Bargaining over a set of possible outcomes Minimum for each party Voluntary agreement Neither will agree to an outcome worse than minimum
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Chapter 15-18 Figure 15.7 The Nash Bargaining Solution F U A N U0 fNfN d T Max V=(U-U0)*(F-F0) The Nash solution F0
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Chapter 15-19 Solutions to the Sequential Bargaining Problem Rubinstein’s Theory (sequential bargaining model) some concepts of non-cooperative game theory bargainers take turns making offers sequentially counter offers can be made utility shrinks in each round (reflecting discount factors)
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Chapter 15-20 B UBUB fBfB f1f1 f2f2 fRfR URUR R Figure 15.8 The Rubinstein Solution to the Bargaining Problem F U F R U1U1 f1f1 d d f4f4 U0U0 Rubinstein’s Solution Effect of delay Costs U4U4 f3f3 f2f2 f3f3 fRfR URUR U2U2 Bargaining lasts for 3 rounds: u-f-u 3 rd round: u offers U 0 2 nd round: f offers C; 1 st round: u offers R C A Sequence: f-u-f 3 rd round: f offers f B 2 nd round: u offers B; 1 st round: f offers A
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Chapter 15-21 End of Chapter Fifteen
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