Chapter 14 - Labor McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 12. LABOUR McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 12.
Advertisements

Factor Markets: Introduction and Factor Demand
Demand for Labor.
Chapter 6 Labour Market. Outline.  The perfectly competitive model of the labour market  Imperfect competition on the labour market  Further topics.
Part 9 Factor Markets Markets for factors of production: labour, capital, land (sometimes entrepreneurship is added) Physical capital and human capital.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 11: Managerial Decision in Competitive Markets.
Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
Chapter 10 The labour market
The basic neoclassical model: Labour demand (1)
Chapter 15 - Resource markets. Economic Resources Resource Resource Payment land rent labor wages capital interest entrepreneurial ability profit.
Chapter 3 The Demand for Labor
1 © 2010 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning Chapter 11 Labor Markets Microeconomics for Today Irvin B. Tucker.
Introduction to Labor Markets Chapter 3: Short-run labor demand.
The Market for Labor.
Questions: (1) Where do the labor demand and supply curves come from? (2) How well do they explain the facts?
©2002 South-Western College Publishing
The Demand For Resources Chapter 12 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
UNIT 5: FACTOR MARKETS Why does a coach get paid $6 million?
1 Chapter 11 Practice Quiz Tutorial Labor Markets ©2000 South-Western College Publishing.
Chapter 29: Labor Demand and Supply
Factor Markets Chapter 18.
INPUT MARKET.
Chapter 14 - Labor McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2015 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 3 Labor Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 28 Labor Demand and Supply (How many laborers should a firm hire, and at what wage?)
PART FOUR Resource Markets
The labor is worthy of his hire. —The Gospel of St.Luke
Slide 1Copyright © 2004 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Chapter 14 Labour.
Chapter 11: Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
Next page Chapter 5: The Demand for Labor. Jump to first page 1. Derived Demand for Labor.
Resource Market Mr. Barnett AP Microeconomics UHS.
Chapter 11: Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1 Chapter 11 Practice Quiz Labor Markets Marginal revenue product measures the increase in a. output resulting from one more unit of labor. b. TR.
Marginal Productivity Theory. Marginal Physical Product Extra Output from each additional unit of resource.
Labor. Chapter Outline ©2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All Rights Reserved. 2 The Perfectly Competitive Firm ’ s Short-Run Demand for Labor The Perfectly.
LABOR DEMAND PROBLEM – How does an employer decide how many people to hire?
Presentation 1 The Demand for Resources. Derived Demand Demand that is derived from the products that the resource helps produce Resources don’t usually.
Next page Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 5 The Demand for Labor.
©McGraw-Hill Education, 2014
Chapter 14 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Labor Markets Supply and Demand Wages  Wage = Price of labor including fringe benefits  Real wage = adjustment for inflation.
Factor Markets Unit IV. Basic concepts Similar to those of: – supply and demand –And product markets –Same concepts with new application.
Labor Markets Derived Demand for Workers Chapter 16.
1 Chapter 11 Labor Markets Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2000 South-Western College Publishing.
Micro Unit IV Chapters 25, 26, and The economic concepts are similar to those for product markets. 2. The demand for a factor of production is.
Warm-Up P = $0.50 and W = $1 What is the MRP of the 4th unit of labor?
Chapter 10-Perfect Competition
The other side of the circular flow model
Wage Determination and the Allocation of Labor
LABOR McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 5 The Demand for Labor McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Costs of Production in the Long-run
Chapter 17 Appendix DERIVED DEMAND.
28 C H A P T E R HELP WANTED Wage Determination.
Chapter 11 Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
Chapter 3 The Demand For Labor.
Sides Game.
Factor Markets Chapter 25 Unit 3.
Microeconomics Question #2.
Chapter 3 The Demand for Labor
Chapter 9 Pure Competition McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Wage Determination and the Allocation of Labor
Factor Markets Chapter 25.
Factor Markets Unit VII.
Managerial Decisions in Competitive Markets
Labor Markets Supply and Demand. Labor Markets Supply and Demand.
The Demand for Resources
Economics for Today Irvin B. Tucker
Wage Determination Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 14 - Labor McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2015 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Profit maximization Economic profit = TR - TC Adding a worker increases TR and increases TC. A firm will add more labor if TR rises by more than TC. A firm can increase its profits by using less labor if the additional revenue generated by the last worker is less than the additional cost of adding that worker.

VMP and MRP Value of marginal product (VMP): the value, at current market price, of the extra output produced by an additional unit of input. VMP = MPinput X Price of Product (assumes perfect competition in output market) Marginal revenue product (MRP) of labor = the additional revenue that results from the use of an additional unit of labor MRP = MPinput X MR (assumes imperfect competition in output market) Under perfect competition VMP = MRP (WHY?)

MRP, MFC and Profit Maximization Marginal factor cost (MFC) of labor = the additional cost associated with the use of an additional unit of labor A firm will use more labor if MRP > MFC A firm will use less labor if MRP < MFC Aa firm maximizes its profit at the level of labor use at which MRP = MFC

Slope of MP Curve law of diminishing returns

Slope of MR Curve affect MRP MRP = MR x MP MR is constant if the output market is perfectly competitive and decreasing if the output market is imperfectly competitive.

Slope of MRP Curve MRP = MR x MP =VMP

Marginal Factor Cost In a perfectly competitive labor market, MFC = w

Short-run Labor Demand in a Perfectly Competitive Labor Market

Short-run Labor Demand in a Perfectly Competitive Labor Market Note: The market demand curve for labor is simply the horizontal summation of all of the individual firms' labor demand curves

The Competitive Firm’s Short-Run Demand for Labor Once Again

Labor Demand in the Long-run The firm’s demand for labor will tend to be more elastic the more elastic the demand is for its product. The firm’s demand for labor will tend to be more elastic the more it is able to substitute the services of labor for those of other inputs.

The Market Demand Curve for Labor

Sample Problem The XYZ Company is a monopolist for a newly-patented food supplement. The demand for the product is P = 25 - 2Q, and the short-run production function is Q = 4L. We want to find the firm’s demand for labor. Solve for MR and you will get MR = 25 - 4Q We know firms hire such that W= MPL x MR We can see that that MPL = 4 So W =(4) (25 - 4Q) = 100 – 16Q, but we want to find demand for labor. We know Q =4L So W = 100 - 64L

Monopsony Average factor cost (AFC): another name for the supply curve for an input. Total factor cost (TFC): the product of the employment level of an input and its average factor cost. Marginal factor cost (MFC): the amount by which total factor cost changes with the employment of an additional unit of input. The optimal level of employment for a monopsonist is the level for which MFC equal the demand for labor. For the monopsony firm wages will be lower than under competition.

Average and Marginal Factor Cost

The Profit-Maximizing Wage and Employment Levels for a Monopsonist

Comparing Monopsony and Competition in the Labor Market

A Statutory Minimum Wage

Discrimination In The Labor Market Customer discrimination: the firm’s customers do not wish to deal with minority employees. Coworker discrimination: when some type of worker (i.e white workers) feel uneasy about working with other type of workers (i.e. blacks) and may prefer employment in firms that hire only their type. Employer discrimination: wage differentials that arise from an arbitrary preference by the employer for one group of worker over another. Statistical discrimination iStatistical discrimination is an economic theory of racial or gender inequality based on stereotypes. According to this theory, inequality may exist and persist between demographic groups even when economic agents (consumers, workers, employers, etc.) are rational and non-prejudiced.

Wage Variation It is impossible to explain the variation in wages across workers with the tools developed so far we must consider the heterogeneity that exists across workers and the types of jobs they take Human Capital differences in human capital translate into differences in worker productivities workers with greater productivities would be expected to earn higher wages investment in human capital is similar to that in physical capital, but there are differences investments are sunk costs opportunity costs are related to past investments

Wage Variation Compensating Differentials individuals prefer some jobs to others desirable job characteristics may make a person willing to take a job that pays less than others jobs that are unpleasant or dangerous will require higher wages to attract workers these differences in wages are termed compensating differentials