Economics of Gender Chapter 8 Assist.Prof.Dr.Meltem INCE YENILMEZ.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
18 Markets for Factors of Production CHAPTER. 18 Markets for Factors of Production CHAPTER.
Advertisements

Chapter 1: The Labor Market Labor Economics: Studies the determination of wages and employment and the resulting income distribution. Most relevant to.
Chapter 8: Women’s Earnings, Occupations, and the Labor Market Year 2002: –FT employed females earned 77.5% of FT employed males. –Female wage growth more.
Factor Markets and the Distribution of Income
Part 9 Factor Markets Markets for factors of production: labour, capital, land (sometimes entrepreneurship is added) Physical capital and human capital.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Describe the anatomy of the markets for labor,
Chapter 15 - Resource markets. Economic Resources Resource Resource Payment land rent labor wages capital interest entrepreneurial ability profit.
Chapter 4. The Labor Mkt & LFP Labor market supply and demand elasticity LFP trends Using labor mkt. to explain LFP trends Labor market supply and demand.
Ch. 17: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets Objectives – The firm’s choice of the quantities of labor and capital to employ. – People’s choices of the.
1 Resource Markets Chapter 11 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
1 © 2010 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning Chapter 11 Labor Markets Microeconomics for Today Irvin B. Tucker.
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.
The Theory of Aggregate Supply Classical Model. Learning Objectives Understand the determinants of output. Understand how output is distributed. Learn.
Ch. 18: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets
The Market for Labor.
Chapter 30: The Labor Market Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 13e.
18 PART 6 Demand and Supply in Factor Markets
Productivity, Output, and Employment. Overview of this class  How much does an economy produce? Productivity  How much labor is demanded for production?
Chapter 11: The Labor Market
The Labor and Land Markets
How are wages determined in competitive labor markets The factor market questions on the AP test will place the heaviest emphasis on labor markets because.
TRUE or FALSE 1. The labor force participation rate of women has risen from 37.6% in 1960 to 60.6% in The hourly earnings of full-time working.
©2002 South-Western College Publishing
Chapter 10 Labor Market Discrimination Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Labor Economics, 4 th edition.
Chapter 18 notes Part 1.
1 Chapter 11 Practice Quiz Tutorial Labor Markets ©2000 South-Western College Publishing.
© 2005 Worth Publishers Slide 12-1 CHAPTER 12 Factor Markets and the Distribution of Income PowerPoint® Slides by Can Erbil and Gustavo Indart © 2005 Worth.
Marginal Productivity Theory of Income Distribution
Chapter 29: Labor Demand and Supply
Chapter 3 Productivity, Output, and Employment Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inc.
1 CHAPTER 12 Factor Markets and the Distribution of Income PowerPoint® Slides by Can Erbil © 2004 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved.
Chapter 3 Labor Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 8 Resources Economics: The Case of Labour Economics.
Labour and Capital Market
To Accompany “Economics: Private and Public Choice 13th ed.” James Gwartney, Richard Stroup, Russell Sobel, & David Macpherson Slides authored and animated.
Chapter Thirteen Labor Markets. Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Company, Inc. All rights reserved Figure 13.1: Labor Demand Curve and Labor Supply.
CHAPTER 9 The Economy at Full Employment CHAPTER 9 The Economy at Full Employment Chapter 26 in Economics Michael Parkin ECONOMICS 5e.
Gender earnings ratio/gap 2002 weekly earnings ratio: =.77 “women earn 77% as much as men” “women earn 77 cents to men’s dollar” 2002 weekly earnings.
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.
1 Chapter 10 Practice Quiz Tutorial Labor Markets and Income Distribution ©2004 South-Western.
Chapter 16: The Markets for Labor and Other Factors of Production © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick.
1 Labor Markets and Income Distribution ©2006 South-Western College Publishing.
C h a p t e r sixteen © 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien—1 st ed. Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 3-1 Chapter Outline The Production Function The Demand for Labor The Supply of Labor Labor Market Equilibrium.
Ch. 8 Continued: Women’s Earnings--Overview Labor Market: –Shows supply and demand for labor; –Results in equilibrium wage rate and employment level. –Assume.
How many hours of labor would firms hire (the quantity demanded), if the wage were $____ per hour, given that everything else relevant to the demand for.
1 ECON – Principles of Microeconomics S&W, Chapter 8 Labor Markets Instructor: Mehmet S. Tosun, Ph.D. Department of Economics University of Nevada,
Chapter 11 Resource Markets © 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning.
Micro Chapter 13 Earnings, Productivity, and the Job Market.
Labor Markets Supply and Demand Wages  Wage = Price of labor including fringe benefits  Real wage = adjustment for inflation.
Investments in Human Capital: Education and Training
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.
Unit 5: The Resource Market 1. Review 1.Give an example of Derived Demand. 2.Define MRP. 3.Explain the difference between MRP and MR. 4.Why does the MRP.
Earnings Differences Between Men and Women
©2002 South-Western College Publishing
Chapter 11 Resource Markets © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Chapter 17 Appendix DERIVED DEMAND.
How are wages determined in competitive labor markets
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.
Unit 5: The Resource Market
Economics for Today Irvin B. Tucker
Part 7 FACTOR MARKETS.
C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to Describe the anatomy of the markets for labor,
Ch. 18: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets
Chapter 11 Resource Markets © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
The Markets for the Factors of Production
Presentation transcript:

Economics of Gender Chapter 8 Assist.Prof.Dr.Meltem INCE YENILMEZ

Women’s Earnings, Occupation and Education: An Overview – The Gender Earnings Ratio Facts and trends – Explanations for the Gender Earnings Gap Occupational segregation Education – The Labor Market

The Gender Earnings Ratio or Gap Measurements of Earnings: – The average or median Median is more favorable – Annual, weekly, monthly earnings Usually weekly earnings exist – Full time, year-round workers

Measuring the Gender Earnings Gap Gender earnings ratio women’s median earnings men’s median earnings = Gender earnings gap = 1 – gender earnings ratio

Female/Male Hourly Wage Ratios by Age Group and Year, 1978–1998

Blau and Kahn, 2001 These researchers stated that an increase in the gender earnings ratio could result from two factors: – Better economic status of new cohorts of young workers (successive cohorts of the same age) – Better conditions for workers already in the labor market as they move through their own careers (same cohort as it ages 10 years)

Why is There a Gender Gap in Earnings? Are there different skills between men and women? – By choice or constraint? Family Responsibilities Occupational Choice (or not choice) Is there a different return to the same skills? – Labor market discrimination

Female-Male Median Earnings Ratios by Education and Occupation, 2006

Female-Male Median Earnings Ratios by Education and Occupation, 2006 (continued)

Occupational Segregation and the Gender Earnings Gap Occupational segregation has to do with the extent to which there are “men’s jobs” and “women’s jobs.” Still, women are highly concentrated in just a few, predominately female occupations Does this explain their lower earnings relative to men?

Measuring Occupational Segregation: The Duncan Index The Duncan Index is based on the number of occupations and the proportion of men/women in each occupation Varies between 0 and 100 – 0 = perfect integration – 100 = perfect segregation Formula: S i = 1/2∑|M i – F i | – Where M and F are the percentage of males and female in the labor force who work in occupation i

Example of a Calculation of the Duncan Index Case 1: S i = 1/2∑|M i – F i | = ½ x { |60 – 0| + |25 – 10| + |10 – 40| + |5 – 50|} = 75 This is a high degree of segregation Case 2: S i = 1/2∑|M i – F i | = ½ x { |30 – 10| + |25 – 20| + |35 – 35| + |10 – 35|} = 25 Now we have much less segregation

The Duncan Index (continued) The greater the number of occupation categories the greater of segregation index There is also considerable INTRA-occupational segregation, for example men are more likely than women to hold top positions

Gender Differences in Education and the Gender Earnings Gap Men and women graduate high school in equal numbers Currently, women are more likely to be college graduates than are men Women have increasingly enrolled in professional programs (law, medicine, dentistry, MBA programs) as well

How Labor Markets Work— An Overview of Wage Determination The basics, supply and demand, in competitive labor markets: – Labor supply decisions by individuals, HH – Labor demand decisions by firms

Labor Demand Derived demand – Depends on the demand for the product produced Demanders are firms, government, universities etc. Demand labor to produce products to sell for a profit Employees are paid, w, wage

How Do Firms Decide How Many Workers to Hire? Firms make a cost/benefit comparison: – Cost of additional worker is w – Value of additional worker is: – Additional output of unit of labor, marginal product of labor (MP L ) Law of diminishing marginal productivity of labor – Price of output produced by additional labor (p) – Marginal revenue product (MRP) = p x MPL – Firms hire as long as w < or = MRP of last worker hired

The labor demand curve is downward sloping because as the wage increases, firms hire fewer workers since they are more expensive The law of diminishing marginal product of labor gives rise to the negative relationship between wages and the firm’s demand for labor The market demand curve is the horizontal sum of all an individual firm’s demand curves

Labor Supply Individuals supply labor to firms The labor supply curve is upward sloping because as the wage increases more individuals are willing to work

Labor Supply, Labor Demand and Labor Market Equilibrium

The Comparative Statics of Labor Markets: Factors that Shift the Labor Demand Curve An increase or decrease in the wage rate is a movement along the labor demand curve Shifters include situations where: – Labor productivity rises (MPL rises) more capital more skills – Demand for product rises increase P, MRP

The Comparative Statics of Labor Markets: Factors that Shift the Labor Supply Curve An increase or decrease in the wage is a movement along the labor supply curve Shifters include: – Changes in population – Changing preferences – Changes in non-earned income

Thinking About Wage Rates Wages are prices of labor and act as a signal to workers and firms – Unless wages can adjust to reflect values, labor resources will be inefficiently valued