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A2 Economics
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Aim: To understand wage determination Objectives: Define economic rent and transfer earnings Explain wage determination in perfectly competitive market Analyse the football labour market
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Who should be paid more, MPs or news readers?
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Real Wage Rate Quantity of Labour Q W1 S D1=MRP Real Wage Rate Quantity of Labour Q W1 D1=MRP One Employer in the MarketThe Whole Labour Market
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Each employer passively accepts the ruling market wage rate. Each firm can hire as many workers as it wishes at the ruling wage rate, but cannot influence it itself. Provides a yardstick for judging the extent to which real world markets perform efficiently or inefficiently.
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Economic Rent: the payment received by a factor of production over and above that which is needed to keep it in its present occupation. Transfer Earnings: the minimum payment needed to keep a factor of production in its present use.
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What a factor of production can earn in its next best alternative use. I.e. the opportunity cost of a factor performing its current role.
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Surplus payment over and above transfer earnings. Total earnings minus transfer earnings.
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E.g. If a footballers’ weekly pay is £10,000 per week, and the next best job he can do is a plumber which pays £500 per week, his economic rent is £9,500 and his transfer earnings are £500.
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Real Wage Rate/MRP Quantity of Labour Q W S D=MRP A B Total Earnings = OWQA O Economic Rent = WAB Transfer Earnings = OABQ
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The amount of economic rent earned by individual workers will differ. First worker would have been prepared to work for much less than the wage rate actually paid, so a high proportion of his earnings will be economic rent. The last worker to be employed would have been prepared to work only for the given wage rate and so earns no economic rent.
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The proportion of earnings made up of economic rent depends on the elasticity of supply. Economic rent will be a large proportion of earnings when supply is inelastic.
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Premiership footballers earn large economic rents. Imagine what the next best job for Rio Ferdinand would be….
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Supply will be inelastic as if the changed the wage rate most footballers would continue to supply themselves. Real Wage Rate/MRP Quantity of Premiership Footballers Q1 W1 S D=MRP O
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0vUDrUY TsHQ&feature=results_video&playnext=1&lis t=PL4CEC04390392C406 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0vUDrUY TsHQ&feature=results_video&playnext=1&lis t=PL4CEC04390392C406 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDvGxNk X4AU http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDvGxNk X4AU http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbT5q1Jr fhs&feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbT5q1Jr fhs&feature=related 3.29 2.00
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Discuss how Trade Unions may influence wage rates and the labour supply? Do you feel as though the power of trade unions was lessened by Margaret Thatcher?
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