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Supply of Labor. How do We Spend our Time? Working, playing, sleeping, eating, travelling, working out Simplify: work and leisure Time spent working is.

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Presentation on theme: "Supply of Labor. How do We Spend our Time? Working, playing, sleeping, eating, travelling, working out Simplify: work and leisure Time spent working is."— Presentation transcript:

1 Supply of Labor

2 How do We Spend our Time? Working, playing, sleeping, eating, travelling, working out Simplify: work and leisure Time spent working is time not spent in leisure, and vice versa How do we determine how much of our time to allocate to work and leisure? Marginal decision rule: Do whichever activity has the higher marginal benefit, until they equal.

3 Marginal Utility MU y = Marginal utility of 1$ of income P y = Price of 1$ of income (=1$) MU LE = Marginal utility of 1 extra hour of leisure W = Wage (that is given up to have that one hour of leisure) So, you choose to spend an hour sleeping in rather than going to work, because the marginal utility of that hour of leisure was worth more to you than the marginal utility of working an hour. (1 hour sleep > 1 hour’s wages)

4 And if your wages rise? Assume that you balanced amount of work and leisure such that at the margin the fractions now balance. Then wage rises. What happens to your marginal decision rule? Marginal utility of income becomes greater, so you choose to work more and have less leisure This is the substitution effect. You substitute work for leisure because of the greater payoff.

5 But the Income effect… But leisure is a “normal” good, which means you consume more of it when your income rises. So, as income rises, you want more leisure, not less. This conflicts with the substitution effect. For some people, their supply of labor curve could bend backwards

6 Shifts in Labor Supply Curve Change in preferences. –In the 1970s, women entered the workforce instead of raising children –People now are working later in life Changes in income –(Not increase in wage, but income from a source other than work) –Person could inherit wealth, and be less likely to work Changes in prices of related goods –If child care prices rise, women may work less Changes in expectations –If worker’s child is about to enter college, worker may work longer hours –If workers near retirement age and have ample savings, may work less –If stock market crashes, workers may have less savings, so work more Change in population

7 Practice Ideas What is the effect on wages of an increase in labor demand? Increase in labor supply?

8 Minimum Wage Draw a labor market at equilibrium. Explain the results on wages and employment if the government imposed a minimum wage above the market equilibrium wage


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