1 / 8

Labour Market Equilibrium

Labour Market Equilibrium. Competitive labour market: Labour demand Marginal revenue product Labour supply Marginal labour cost Reservation wage Market equilibrium State of rest If surplus Unemployment Downward pressure on wages If shortage Upward pressure on wages

barth
Télécharger la présentation

Labour Market Equilibrium

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. Labour Market Equilibrium

  2. Competitive labour market: • Labour demand • Marginal revenue product • Labour supply • Marginal labour cost • Reservation wage • Market equilibrium • State of rest • If surplus • Unemployment • Downward pressure on wages • If shortage • Upward pressure on wages • Comparative statics • Sticky wages

  3. Monopsony: • Recall a monopoly • MR < P • Inefficiently low output • A monopsony = a single buyer • A monopsony’s demand for labour = market demand • A monopsony’s supply of labour = market supply • Profit maximization • max π = TR(L) – C(L) • First order condition: MR = MC • Marginal revenue product = marginal labour cost • For a monopsony, MLC > reservation wage • Equilibrium • MRP = MLC • Inefficiently low employment and wage

  4. Government in labour market: • Minimum wage • Wage floor • Unemployment • “lousy” jobs (small surplus) lost • Most part-time workers are • Youth • Part-time • Payroll tax • Statutory incidence • Economic incidence • Determined by elasticities of demand and supply • Independent of statutory incidence • Wage rate subsidy • Can think as increase in demand (MRP) or decrease in cost • Targeted wage subsidies • Student summer jobs • Industry that “develops”

  5. Unions in labour market: • Two ways to increase wages • Increase demand for labour • Decrease supply of labour • Increase demand for labour • “Buy Union Made” promotion campaign • Improving union member productivity • Subsidized training/education • Featherbedding • Are these guys featherbedding? • Often difficult to define

  6. Unions in labour market: • Supply of labour • Industrial union • Members belong to an industry • CAW • CUPE • Any occupation • Fight for regulations / standards / minimum wage • Why join a union • Till the day I die • Craft union • Certain skill • IBEW • Restrict supply • Entry barriers • Certification/apprenticeship requirements • Requirements to hire union member • Closed shop agreements in contracts

  7. Unions in labour market: • General agreement • Unions raise wages • Unions create unemployment • But how much, empirically? • Unclear for unemployment • Likely 10 to 30% above no-union for wage

  8. Disequilibriumin labour market: • Unemployment • Job search • Takes time and effort • Expected marginal benefits of search • Marginal cost of search • Lost net wages • Optimal duration • EI and job search • Sticky wages • Labour contracts and long-term relationships • Efficiency wages • Heterogenous workers and job rationing • Imperfect information and incentives against shirking

More Related