Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 1 Chapter: 18 – The Markets for the Factors of Production Exercise n° 6.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Esercitazione n°5 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 1 Chapters: 16 – Oligopoly 17 – Monopolistic Competition Exercises.
Advertisements

MICROECONOMICS EV Prof. Davide Vannoni. Exercise session 3 1.Firm in perfectly competitive market 2.Short-run and long-run competition 3.Price support.
© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning, all rights reserved C H A P T E R The Markets for the Factors of Production M icroeonomics P R I N C.
Economic Analysis for Business Session XV: Market for Factors of Production Instructor Sandeep Basnyat
The Theory of Consumer Choice
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 11: Managerial Decision in Competitive Markets.
The Theory of Consumer Choice
In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:
1 © 2010 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning Chapter 11 Labor Markets Microeconomics for Today Irvin B. Tucker.
Profit Maximization and Derived Demand A firm’s hiring of inputs is directly related to its desire to maximize profits –any firm’s profits can be expressed.
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. The Market for the Factors of Production The demand for a factor of production.
MARKET FOR FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
Chapter 9 © 2006 Thomson Learning/South-Western Profit Maximization and Supply.
Part 7 Further Topics © 2006 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
The Market for Labor.
REVENUE THEORY IB Business & Management A Course Companion 2009 THE THEORY OF THE FIRM: COSTS, REVENUES AND PROFITS.
Competitive Markets for Goods and Services
THE ECONOMICS OF LABOR MARKETS
Summer Semester  Objective of a firm in a competitive market is to maximize profit.  Profit is equal to total revenue minus total cost of production.
revenue, cost and profit.
Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #16 – March 11, 2004 Chapter 7 How firms make decisions - profit maximization.
Economic Applications of Functions and Derivatives
Factor Markets: Factor Demand
Cost and Production J.F.O’Connor. Production Function Relationship governing the transformation of inputs or factors of production into output or product.
Five Sources Of Monopoly
Factor Markets Chapter 18.
INPUT MARKET.
The Markets for the Factors of Production
Chapter 4 Consumer and Firm Behavior: The Work- Leisure Decision and Profit Maximization Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.
Lecture Notes: Econ 203 Introductory Microeconomics Lecture/Chapter 18: Markets for Factors of Production M. Cary Leahey Manhattan College Fall 2012.
Labour and Capital Market
Chapter 5 Section 2.  Marginal Product of Labor ◦ The change in output from hiring one additional unit of labor  Increasing Marginal Returns ◦ Workers.
Practice Questions Two goods are ________. A(n) _________ in the price of one good will _________ the demand for the other good: (A) substitutes; increase;
Economic Analysis for Business Session XVI: Theory of Consumer Choice – 2 (Utility Analysis) with Production Function Instructor Sandeep Basnyat
Short-run Production Function
The Theory of Consumer Choice
Chapter 6 Production. ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 62 Topics to be Discussed The Technology of Production Production with One Variable Input.
UNIT 6 Pricing under different market structures
Next page Chapter 5: The Demand for Labor. Jump to first page 1. Derived Demand for Labor.
Review of the previous lecture The consumer optimizes by choosing the point on his budget constraint that lies on the highest indifference curve. When.
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.
Chapter 4 Consumer and Firm Behaviour: The Work-Leisure Decision and Profit Maximization Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education Canada.
Chapter Six The Supply Curve and the Behavior of Firms.
Chapter 6: Perfectly Competitive Supply
CDAE Class 21 Nov. 6 Last class: Result of Quiz 5 6. Costs Today: 7. Profit maximization and supply Quiz 6 (chapter 6) Next class: 7. Profit maximization.
Mankiw et al. Principles of Microeconomics, 2nd Canadian Edition 1 Chapter 18 The Market for the Factors of Production © 2002 by Nelson, a division of.
Next page Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 5 The Demand for Labor.
1 Chapter 6 Supply The Cost Side of the Market 2 Market: Demand meets Supply Demand: –Consumer –buy to consume Supply: –Producer –produce to sell.
1 Chapter 1 Appendix. 2 Indifference Curve Analysis Market Baskets are combinations of various goods. Indifference Curves are curves connecting various.
Market for Factors of Production Lecturer: Jack Wu.
Labor Markets Supply and Demand Wages  Wage = Price of labor including fringe benefits  Real wage = adjustment for inflation.
Chapter 4 Consumer and Firm Behavior: The Work-Leisure Decision and Profit Maximazation.
The Economics of Labor Markets Chapter 18 Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of.
Steven Landsburg, University of Rochester Chapter 5 The Behavior of Firms Copyright ©2005 by Thomson South-Western, a part of the Thomson Corporation.
MARKET FOR FACTORS OF PRODUCTION Lecturer: Jack Wu.
FACTOR DEMAND. FACTOR MARKETS VIDEO SERIES Carefully view each of these ACDCL videos prior to viewing this powerpoint:
Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Lecture 26: The Labour Market The supply of labour (consumer: leisure time/money trade-off). The demand for labour (theory.
Chapter The Markets for the Factors of Production 18.
Lecture 17 Production function and labour demand
Short-run Production Function
Markets for Factors of Production
Chapter 17 Appendix DERIVED DEMAND.
Chapter 4 Consumer and Firm Behavior: The Work-Leisure Decision and Profit Maximazation.
Chapter 3 The Demand For Labor.
Profit Maximization Chapter 9-1.
Microeconomics Question #2.
CHAPTER 14 OUTLINE 14.1 Competitive Factor Markets 14.2 Equilibrium in a Competitive Factor Market 14.3 Factor Markets with Monopsony Power 14.4 Factor.
Part 7 FACTOR MARKETS.
Part 7 FACTOR MARKETS.
Presentation transcript:

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 1 Chapter: 18 – The Markets for the Factors of Production Exercise n° 6

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 2 Practice Exercise n.1 Firm “A” manufactures good “X”. The following table shows for firm “A” the quantity of labor employed (hours) and the corresponding quantities of good “X” manufactured. The firm sells good “X” in a perfectly competitive market at the price of 10€; the labor market is perfectly competitive too and the hourly wage is equal to 11€ Qty of labor (hours)Units of good X

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 3 A) Compute the marginal product of labor, the value of the marginal product and the marginal profit MPL: the marginal product of labor is the increase of the quantity manufactured due to an increase of a unit of labor employed ( N.B. MPL is decreasing) MPL=  Q/  L VMPL=PxMPL VMPL: the value of the marginal product is the marginal product of a factor multiplied by the price of the product (N.B. VMPL is decreasing). It represents the marginal contribution to revenues due to the increase of one unit of labor.   =VMPL - W  : the marginal profit is the change in profits due to the last unity of labor employed, and is obtained as the difference between the marginal revenue (VMPL value of the marginal product), and the marginal cost (W wage).

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 4 LQPW MPL=  Q/  L VMPL=PxMPL   =VMPL - W

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 5 Production Function: the relationship between the quantity of the factor employed and the quantity manufactured of a good B) Show graphically the production function, the marginal product, the value of the marginal product, and the marginal profit.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 6 MPL:“the increase of the quantity of product due to a unit increase of the labor” The marginal product of labor is decreasing, i.e. it decreases with the increase of the quantity of labor

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 7 VMPL:“the marginal product of labor (in units of the good) multiplied by the price of the good”

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 8 Marginal Profit:“ change of profit due to a unit increase of labor employed”

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 9 W = 11€ Optimal choice VMPL = W C) How much labor will be employed? The firm in order to select the optimal quantity of labor compares the marginal revnue due to the last unit of labor (value of the marginal product) with the marginal cost of the same unit (wage). It keeps to employ new workers as long as the marginal profit is positive.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 10  >0  <0 Optimal Qty labor MR > MC VMPL > W  >0 If the marginal profit is positive, profits are increasing, and viceversa. The firm maximizes its profits by employing 5 hours of labor.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 11 D) If the fixed cost is equal to 100€ and there is only one variable input (labor), what is the total profit of the firm? TC = FC + VC = FC +(qty labor x wage) = (5x11) = 155 Profit = TR – TC = 190 – 155 = 35€ TR = qty manufactured x price = 19 x 10 = 190 The optimal choice of 5 units of labor at a wage of 11€, the output will therefore be 19 units of good at a price of 10€ each.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 12 E) How does the optimal choice of the firm change if the price of the product raises up to 12€? LQPW MPL=  Q/  L VMPL=PxMPL  =VMPL - W The firm should now employ a further unit of work as compared to the previous situation

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 13 F) What happens if the wage increase up to 15€, while the price of the good is 12€?

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 14 LQPW MPL=  Q/  L VMPL=PxMPL  =VMPL - W New cost of labor is 15 €, while the price of the good is 12 €. Since the wage has increased, the employment of the sixth unit of work is not convenient anymore: the profit maximising firm will use 5 units of work.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 15 Problem n. 3 pag. 335 Discuss the effect of each of the following events on the labor market of the computer industry: a)The Ministry of Education buys a Personal Computer for each graduate student. b)An increasing quantity of students graduates in engineering and in information sciences. c)The firms manufacturing computers build new productive plants.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 16 a) If the Ministry of Education buys a PC for each student, the demand of PC increases, the price increases as well as the value of the marginal product of the workers that manufacture computers. Therefore, the labor demand on the market of PCs increases, and it will result in an increase in the wages and in the number of employed workers. PC Market S D price quantity P Labor Market S D wage n.workers W D1D1 P1P1 D1D1 W1W1 L L1L1 VMPL = P x MPL VMPL = P 1 x MPL

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 17 b) If a greater number of students graduates in engineering and information sciences, the number of workers that would like to work for firms manufacturing computers increases. The labor supply increases, therefore the wage decreases and the number of employed workers increases. Wage n° workers S S1S1 D W W1W1 L1L1 L

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 18 c) The building of new plants in this industry causes an increase in the marginal product of labor and in the value of the marginal product of labor, for all levels of labor employed. The labor demand will increase, and both the number of workers and the wage level will increase. Wage n° workers S D1D1 D W W1W1 L1L1 L

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 19 Problem n. 6 pag. 396 Sara is awake for 100 hours a week. Show in a graph the budget line for Sara if she earns 6, 8 or 10 € per hour. Draw the indifference curve for Sara in a way in which her labor supply curve is positively sloped if the wage is between 6 and 8 € and negatively sloped if it is between 8 and 10 €.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C Leisure time (hours) Consum ption(€) Sara’s budget line when she earns 10€ per hour, maximum consumption 1000€, maximum n° of hours of leisure time 100 Sara’s budget line when she earns 8€ per hour, maximum consumption 800€, maximum n° of hours of leisure time 100 Sara’s budget line when she earns 6€ per hour, maximum consumption 600€, maximum n° of hours of leisure time 100

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 21 Between 6€ and 8€ of hourly wage. Indifference curves that result in a positively sloped labor supply curve (labor supply increases with the wage) must exhibit an increase in the worked hours, and therefore a reduction of leisure, after an increase in the wage. Leisure is relatively more expensive, as the wage increases, and the substitution effect implies a reduction of leisure. The income effect determines an increase in the consumption of all goods, included leisure. In such case the substitution effect must prevail, with a net reduction of leisure, and a labor supply curve which is positively sloped.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 22 Between 8€ and 10 € of hourly wage. Indifference curves that result in a negatively sloped labor supply curve (labor supply decreases as the wage increases) must exhibit a reduction in worked hours, therefore an increase of leisure, as the wage increases. Leisure is relatively more expensive, if the wage increases, and the substitution effect has the effect of reducing the hours of leisure and increasing the quantity of consumed goods. The income effect determines an increase in the consumption of all goods, included leisure. In such a case the income effect must prevail, with a net increase of leisure, that brings to a negatively sloped labor supply curve.

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 23 For a wage between 6€ and 8€ leisure time reduces from L 1 to L 2. For a wage between 8€ and 10€ leisure time increases from L 2 a L 3 100Leisure time (hours) consump (€) L2L2 L1L1 L3L3 C1C1 C2C2 C3C3 The consumption of goods different from leisure always increases as the wage increases

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 24 Practice Exercise In the labor market, when wages increase, the substitution effect determines an increase of the quantity of labor, while the income effect brings a reduction of the quantity of labor. (True/False) Describe with a graph. True Initial situation: point A Hourly wage 50 €, 20 hours available for labor and leisure time Choice of the worker, given his preferences: 6 hours of leisure and 14 hours of work at 50 € that allow a consumption of 700 € After the wage increase: point B Hourly wage 75 €, 20 hours available for labor and leisure time, the maximum availability of leisure does not change, but the maximum amount of consumption changes. For each hour devoted to leisure one abandons the possibility to consume a greater quantity of goods. Worker’s choice, given his preferences: 5 hours of leisure and thus 15 hours of work that allow to consume goods for 1125 €

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 25 consump Leisure time I2I2 I3I3 I1I1 A 6 hours 700 € C 5 hours B 1125 €

Esercitazione n.7 Jose FranchinoIstituzioni di economia 2002/2003 corso C 26 Substitution Effect: from A to C The wage increase renders leisure more expensive in terms of consumption, therefore one increases consumption and reduces leisure, i.e. the worked hours increase Income Effect: from C to B The wage increase determines an income effect similar to an increase in the income, so both leisure and consumption of other goods increase, i.e. the worked hours decrease