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Nonwage Labor Costs. hiring and training costsemployee benefitsThese costs make up 20 to 30% of payroll.(See Table 5.2 on page 135). These nonwage labor costs are important in determining the number of employees hired and the number of hours they work. . WHY?. Hiring costs include:. advertisin
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1. Chapter 5 Quasi-Fixed Labor Costs and Their Effects on Demand
2. Nonwage Labor Costs hiring and training costs
employee benefits
These costs make up 20 to 30% of payroll.
(See Table 5.2 on page 135)
3. These nonwage labor costs are important in determining the number of employees hired and the number of hours they work. WHY?
4. Hiring costs include: advertising positions
screening potential employees
processing successful applicants
5. Training can be formal or informal
6. Three types of training costs: Explicit monetary costs - labor costs of individuals used as trainers and materials used in training process
Implicit opportunity costs of trainees time - lost production while a worker is being trained
Implicit and opportunity costs of capital and experienced employees used in training - lost production while a worker is being trained
8. These costs are incurred in early years of employment and yield returns throughout the term of employment.
9. One important aspect of training is who bears the cost of the training - - the firm or the worker?
10. Employee Benefits legally required social insurance contributions
unemployment insurance, workers compensation, Social Security, Medicare
privately provided benefits
holiday pay, vacation and sick leave, pensions, health and life insurance
12. Because many of these nonwage costs are costs per worker instead of costs per hour worked, they are considered to be quasi-fixed costs. Once an employee is hired, these quasi-fixed costs don't change, regardless of hours worked.
13. Hiring and training costs are quasi-fixed because they are associated with each new employee hired and not with the number of hours he or she works.
14. Insurance premiums are also quasi-fixed.
15. How do quasi fixed costs affect these decisions: How many workers should the firm hire?
How many hours should each employee work?
If the firm needs to increase output, should it hire more workers or increase the number of hours worked by each employee?
16. Let's look at the firm's decision of how many workers to hire (M) and the average number of hours worked each week per employee (H).
17. Q = f (M,H) Assume MPM > 0 and MPH > 0 but both are diminishing.
18. Lets call the marginal expense an employer faces when employing an additional worker MEM. MEM will be a function of both the quasi-fixed labor costs plus the workers wage and variable employee benefit costs
19. Lets call the marginal expense an employer faces when it decides to increase the average workweek of its employees by one hour MEH. MEH will be equal to the hourly wage and variable employee benefits costs multiplied by the number of workers
20. To minimize costs, the firm should follow the equi-marginal principle: MPM/MEM = MPH/MEH
21. Much overtime worked is due to rush orders, deadlines, seasonal demand, etc. However, some of it is regularly scheduled overtime
22. Why does an employer regularly schedule overtime?
23. Suppose that a firm is currently maximizing profit and then quasi- fixed costs increase: MPM/MEM < MPH/MEH because MEM increased
to restore the equi-marginal principle, the firm must either increase the left-hand side or decrease the right-hand side (or both)
because of diminishing marginal product, the left hand side will increase if M is lowered and the right hand side will decrease if H is increased
24. Suppose government wishes to encourage employers to increase employment and stop using regular overtime. How can it do this? Increase the overtime premium
this will increase MEH so that MPM/MEM > MPH/MEH
employers will need to either decrease H or increase M (or both)
25. But, there may be reasons why this does not lead to an increase in employment: Employers may substitute capital for labor
scale effects may occur as the price of output increases
total labor hours may fall limiting the employment gain for any decline in overtime hours
26. Hiring And Training Costs Firms worry about not only current MRPL but also future MRPL
Contracts with workers are usually long term
27. Were going to assume a two-period time horizon firms incur hiring and training costs in the first period which cost Z per worker in real terms (dollar costs/product price)
without training the worker's MPL is MP*
during training he's not as productive so his MPL is MP0 (which < MP*)
after training, MPL is higher than without training (i.e., MP1 > MP*)
the wage the firm must pay is w0 in the first period and w1 in the second period
28. Figure 5.2 Effects of Training on Marginal Product Schedules
29. MP*- MP0 is the implicit cost of the trainees time in training
30. Since a dollar in the future is worth less than a dollar today we must discount the future costs and productivity.
31. Present value of marginal productivity
32. Present value of the marginal expense of labor
33. The profit-maximizing condition is therefore: PVP = PVE
34. If Z=0 (no hiring and training costs), profit maximization requires that: this implies that the firm can maximize profit by setting MP0 = w0 and MP1= w1
in this case, the end result of the two-period model is exactly the same as the one-period model (workers are paid their MPL)
35. However, Z > 0 implies that the firm has made some sort of initial investment in terms of hiring or training costs. Thus, the firm will want to recoup these costs in the future.
36. The Net Expense of Hiring a Worker in the Initial Period: this is likely to be positive because the amount that the firm spends on the worker in the initial period (w0 + Z) is likely to be greater than the workers productivity in the initial period (MP0)
37. In order to recoup the net expense, the firm must run a net surplus in the next period Note that the net surplus must be discounted because it occurs in the second period.
38. The Net Surplus Is Defined As:
39. To maximize profits, net expense in the initial period must equal the surplus from the subsequent period:
40. Note that wages may not always be equal to MP If net expense > 0 then net surplus > 0
this implies W1 < MP1
if the firm's labor costs in the first period exceed MP then wages in the second period will be less than MP
41. What determines who pays for the costs of training? It depends on what type of training is received
there are two types of training: general training and specific training
42. General training increases a worker's productivity to many employers equally.
43. Specific training increases the worker's productivity only at the specific firm.
44. Suppose the firm offers general training and incurs net costs NE0: the training increases productivity to MP1 in the second period
but, to maximize profit, the firm must keep w1< MP1 to get a net surplus
the workers MP=MP1 to other firms so they would be willing to pay him a wage= MP1
so the worker can earn w1< MP1 if he stays with the firm or he can earn w1= MP1 at other firms
what will the worker likely do?
45. Will a firm offer general training?Who will have to pay?
46. Specific training: increases the worker's productivity only at the specific firm to MP1
at all other firms, the worker is only worth MP*
the firm has an incentive to pay the worker at least MP* (what other firms are willing to pay) but less than MP1 (to recoup some of the costs of training)
47. Lets do an example: Assume:
the worker has a MP = MP* without training
the worker can obtain w= w* = MP* at all firms without training
during specific training the workers MP falls to MP0 and then after training MP rises to MP1 > MP*
48. Graphically:
49. How will the firm set wages? It must meet three conditions:
to maximize profit, the firm must not incur wage and training expenses that exceed the value of the workers productivity
to attract workers, the firm must offer a wage stream whose present value is at least as large as alternative firms
to keep workers after training, the firm must pay a wage greater than w*
50. What will the wage structure look like?
51. Oi used the idea of quasi-fixed costs to explain the following: occupational differences in the stability of employment and earnings
the uneven incidence of unemployment
the persistence of differential labor turnover rates
discriminatory hiring and firing policies
52. Suppose that there is a decrease in product demand a scale effect causes a decrease in the demand for all variable inputs
however, the decreases in demand will not be the same proportion for each input
53. With reduced demand for variable factors, there is an increase in the relative employment of fixed factors. This means that the firm now employs too much of the fixed factor and wishes to substitute this fixed factor for the variable factor.
54. Variable factors that can be more easily replaced by fixed factors will experience the greatest decrease in demand due to the drop in product demand.
55. The more the firm invests in its workers, and the more specific the training, the greater the degree of fixity of that worker.
56. A decline in the demand for the product is reflected in a decrease in the price of the product (P*) this will lead to a decrease in the demand for factors with low degrees of fixity
this decrease occurs through a decline in the MRPL from the reduction in P (remember that MRPL = P * MPL)
The higher the degree of fixity, the smaller the decrease in the demand for the factor
57. Why are some workers more at risk for facing layoffs than others? Since firms want to gain a surplus in the second period, they will not want to lay off workers with high degrees of fixity
this is true because the firm would have more to lose (i.e., training costs incurred in the first period) if these workers take a job at another firm
58. If training is general, then the degree of fixity is lower than if training is specific.
59. Workers with general training are paid a wage equal to MRPL
60. Workers with specific training are paid a wage lower than MRPL
61. For general training w=MPL. Thus, a decrease in demand results in decrease in the quantity of labor hired.
62. General Training
63. General Training
64. General Training
65. For specifically trained workers, the quasi-fixed costs create a gap between wage and MPL that cushions the workers from layoffs over the business cycle.
66. Firms hoard the workers with high degrees of fixity and have them do lower level jobs. So when the demand for labor shifts we get the following:
67. Specific Training
68. Specific Training
69. Specific Training
70. How Do Minimum Wage Laws Affect Training?
71. Minimum wage laws may prevent workers from receiving initial general training since the firm cannot have the workers pay for the training through a lower wage.
72. If minimum wage laws prevent employers from lowering the training-period wage much, employers will not be able to offer a second-period wage that is high enough to keep workers from looking elsewhere for a job. Employers will be reluctant to invest in specific training if they believe that the worker will leave after training
73. Hiring Investments
74. Firms wish to get the best possible work force at the lowest cost. They want workers who are high quality and fast learners.
But, investigating the skill levels of workers can be expensive.
75. Firms rely on credentials or signals in the hiring process an example of this is a requirement that applicants have a college degree instead of a high school degree
the use of the degree as a signal assumes that college degree holders are more productive workers than those without a college degree
76. Firms that require a college degree do not have spend anytime (or money) investigating any high school applicants other signals may include age and marital status
77. This is called statistical discrimination judging an individual by his groups characteristics
there are potential costs to using these signals -- the firm may miss out on some good workers (who dont have the correct signal) or may get lemons (who do have the correct signal)
78. Why are older workers not given the same preference as prime age workers for better paying jobs? prejudice may be a cause
however, this could result from a firms desire to avoid losses on hiring and training investments
firms will not want to train applicants who are close to retirement age
79. Women tend to enter the labor force and leave the labor force more often than men. The average white woman ages 25 to 59 is 15 times more likely to go from having a job to being out of the labor force in any one month period than a comparable male worker.
The average length of job tenure for males is twice that of women.
80. If tenure is shorter, then the firm will have a lower chance of recouping a workers training costs. employers have economic incentives to hire employees who will remain in the labor force when high hiring and training costs are involved
81. Individuals within a group vary considerably, so using individual characteristics to estimate tenure may be problematic and probably does a disservice to many members of that group.