1 / 20

The Labor Market

The Labor Market. S. S. D. D. Households. Firms. Figure 1 Product and Factor Markets. Product Markets. Demand for Goods and Services. Supply of Goods and Services. Supply of Resources. Demand for Resources. Factor Markets.

gillespied
Télécharger la présentation

The Labor Market

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Labor Market

  2. S S D D Households Firms Figure 1 Product and Factor Markets Product Markets Demand for Goods and Services Supply of Goods and Services Supplyof Resources Demand for Resources Factor Markets

  3. Table 1 Data for Spotless Car Wash (Perfectly Competitive Product and Labor Markets)

  4. Dollars $200 1. Hiring another worker adds more to revenue . . . 150 3. until profits are maximized at five workers. 100 50 2. than it adds to cost . . . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Number of Workers Figure 2 The Profit-Maximizing Employment Level 60 MFC = Wage MRP

  5. Dollars Number of Workers Figure 3 The Firm’s Labor Demand Curve Firm's Labor Demand Curve A W1 W1 B W2 W2 MRP n1 n2

  6. Dollars Number of Workers Figure 4 The Employment Decision with Several Variable Inputs A W1 W1 B C W2 W2 Firm' Labor Demand Curve MRP2 MRP1 n1 n2 n3

  7. Firm A Firm B Firm C Hourly Wage Hourly Wage Hourly Wage At any wage rate(such as $10) . . . and by Firms B, C, and all other firms as well . . . if we add the number of workers demanded by Firm A . . . Number of Workers Figure 5 The Market Demand for Labor $12 10 ld ld ld 80 100 40 50 30 90

  8. Labor Market Hourly Wage we get the market quantity of labor demanded at that wage rate. Number of Workers Figure 5 The Market Demand For Labor $12 10 LD N2 = 80 + 40 + 30 + …. N1 = 100 + 50 + 90 + …

  9. Typical Firm Labor Market Hourly Wage Hourly Wage A B A B $10 n1 n2 N1 N2 Number of Workers Number of Workers Figure 6 A Shift in the Labor Demand Curve

  10. Figure 7 Introducing a New Input Hourly Wage More of a Substitutable Input More of a Complementary Input Number of Workers

  11. Table 2 Shifts in the Labor Demand Curve

  12. (a) (b) Hourly Hourly Wage Wage Number of Workers Number of Workers Figure 8 The Market Labor Supply Curve D $12 C 10 $10 1,000 1,200 1,000 1,800

  13. Table 3 Labor Force Participation Rates (Percent of those Over 16 Working or Looking for Work)

  14. Table 4 Shifts in the Labor Supply Curve

  15. 2. When the wage rate rises to $40, employment rises to 60,000 in the short run. Hourly Wage 1. Initially, the wage is $25 and 30,000 people supply labor. 3. In the longrun, the wage rate of $40 attracts new entrants and employment rises to 90,000. 4.The long-run labor supply curve connects points A and C. Number of Workers Figure 9 The Long-Run Labor Supply Curve . $40 B C A 25 30,000 60,000 90,000

  16. (a) Labor Market (b) Typical Firm Hourly Dollars Wage 3. hires up to where its MRP curve crosses the $20 wage line. 2. Each law firm, taking the market wage of $20 as a given, Number of Paralegals 1. The market labor supply and labor demand curves determine the equilibrium wage rate and equilibrium employment. Figure 10 Labor Market Equilibrium LS $24 $20 W 20 LD 16 ld Number of Paralegals 2,000 3,000 4,500 10

  17. (a) (b) Labor Market Typical Firm Dollars Hourly Wage Number of Workers Number of Workers Figure 11 A Change in Labor Demand b B W2 $40 $40 C c 30 W3 30 A a 20 20 W1 5,000 12,000 50 80 120 8,000

  18. AnnualWage Numberof New Finance Professors Figure 12 The Market for Finance Professors (1995–2002) B $102,400 66,900 A N1 N2

  19. In 1978, the average wage rate (in 2001 dollars) for college-educated labor was $31,732. Between 1978 and 2000, the labor supply curve shifted rightward . . . Median Annual Wage 2001 dollars but the rightward shift in the labor demand curve was even greater. As a result, the average wage in 2001 rose to $40,479. Millions of Workers Figure 13 The Market for College-Educated Labor B $40,479 A 31,732 14 31

  20. Figure A.1 A Monopsonist’s Employment Decision

More Related