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McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia Appendix to Chapter 14: Market Power in the Labour Market
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A14-2 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia Market Power in the Labour Market Just as a monopoly firm can restrict output and raise price, so can a monopoly owner of a resource restrict supply and raise price. The main source of market power in labour markets is a labour union, which is an organised group of workers that aims to increase wages and influence other job conditions.
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A14-3 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia Market Power in the Labour Market A Union in a Competitive Labour Market Unions try to restrict the supply for union labour and raise the wage rate. But this action also decreases the quantity of labour demanded.
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A14-4 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia DcDc A Union in a Competitive Market 0 1008590 7 8 9 DuDu SuSu ScSc Labour (hours per day) Wage rate (dollars per hour) Figure A14-1
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A14-5 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia Market Power in the Labour Market How Unions Try to Change the Demand for Labour A union tries to make the demand for union labour inelastic and to increase its demand This lowers the employment lost from a higher wage rate Unions try to increase the demand for union labour by making them more productive through training schemes, apprenticeships and other on-the-job training activities. Unions action increase the supply of labour in non-union markets.
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A14-6 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia Monopsony A monopsony is a market with a single buyer. The employer determines the wage rate and pays the lowest wage at which it can attract the labour it plans to employ A monopsony makes a bigger profit than a group of firms that compete with each other for their labour The ability of a monopsony to cut the wage rate and employment and make an economic profit depends on the elasticity of labour supply
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A14-7 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia MRP = D A Monopsony Labour Market 0 100 7.50 50 5.00 10.00 MCL S Labour (hours per day) Wage rate (dollars per hour) Competitive equilibrium Monopsony equilibrium Figure A14-2
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A14-8 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia Monopsony Monopsony and a Union Sometimes both the firm and the employees have market power when a monopsony encounters a labour union, a situation called a bilateral monopoly. In bilateral monopoly bargaining determine the wage rate
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A14-9 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia Monopsony Monopsony and the Minimum Wage The imposition of a minimum wage may actually increase the level of labour hired by a monopsony. Figure A14.3 shows why.
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A14-10 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia Minimum wage MRP Minimum Wage Law in Monopsony 0 100 7.50 50 5.00 10.00 MCL S Labour (hours per day) Wage rate (dollars per hour) Increase in employment Figure A14-3
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A14-11 McTaggart, Findlay, Parkin: Microeconomics © 2007 Pearson Education Australia END CHAPTER 14 Appendix
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