College Microeconomics Course Chapter 12
the ___ exempted labor unions from antitrust laws
Clayton Act of 1914
the ___ serves as a national organization of unions in mass production industries in the United States
Congress of Industrial Organizations
___ encourages workers to supply more labor
the substitution effect of a wage increase
___ in the job market traces back to training, education, experience, ability, risk of job loss, and risk of injury
wage discrimination
reason why the labor supply curves bend backwards?
a higher wage reduces the work hours of individuals
___ is a union's attempt to withhold labor from a firm to halt production
a strike
difference between a mediator and an arbitrator
an arbitrator has the power to impose a binding settlement on union and management, while a mediator has no power to impose a settlement
an individual who has considerable income from savings, borrowing, support, and scholarship:
will tend to reduce the quantity of labor supplied
suppose a union is unable to resolve issues between workers and management. this adversely affects the productivity of union workers. a fall in the marginal productivity of union workers will lead to a:
fall in the demand for union workers
workers often face migration hurdles due to the strict migration policies in different countries. suppose these countries relax migration policies and there is a reduction in the migration hurdles faced by laborers. this will lead to a:
fall in wage differentials across countries
___ is an attempt to ensure that more union labor is hired than producers would prefer. for example, a musician's union may require more musicians be employed in a Broadway musical than is required.
featherbedding
a group of workers who join together to improve their terms of employment is called a:
labor union
an increase in the demand for union labor ____, everything else remaining unchanged
leads to higher wage and employment
a profit-maximizing firm hires labor up to the point where the:
marginal revenue product of labor equals its marginal resource cost
an impartial observer who helps resolve differences between union and management is known as a:
mediator
an industrial union refers to an:
organization of both skilled and unskilled workers from a particular industry
an increase in the demand for union-made goods will lead to a:
rightward shift of the demand curve for union workers
describes the right-to-work states
states where workers in unionized companies do not have to join the union or pay union dues
major source of union power
strike
suppose a labor union manages to negotiate a wage above the market-clearing level. it is likely to result in a:
surplus in the labor market
what represents the net utility of work?
the difference between the utility from additional consumption and the disutility of work
a rational consumer attempts to maximize utility by allocating his or her time so that:
the expected marginal utility of the last time spent in market work, nonmarket work, and leisure is identical
according to the theory of time allocation, other things constant, ____
the higher the market wage, the lesser the marginal utility of leisure
as the market wage increases, ____
the income effect normally influences you to work less
in the case of a backward-bending labor supply curve,____
the income effect of a higher wage offsets the substitution effect
the approach by which a labor union tries to negotiate an industry-wide wage for different classes of labor is called:
the industrial approach
work or market activity is subject to:
the law of increasing marginal disutility
describes the relationship between an individual worker's labor supply curve and the market labor supply curve
the market labor supply curve is the horizontal summation of the quantities of labor supplied by each worker in the labor market at a given wage rate
what are the three economic uses of time?
1. market work 2. nonmarket work 3. leisure
___ is a negotiation in which union and management must accept an impartial observer's resolution of a dispute
binding arbitration
way by which unions can cause an increase in wages
by forming an exclusive, or craft, union
____ is the process by which representatives from a union and from management negotiate a mutually agreeable contract specifying wages, employee benefits, and working conditions
collective bargaining
a ___ is a group whose members have a particular skill or do a specific job, such as carpenters
craft union
restricting labor supply to increase wages is typical of:
craft unions
true of leisure
it is subject to the law of diminishing marginal utility
the ____ tends to increase an individual's demand for leisure
income effect of a wage increase
unions have grown more reluctant to strike because of the:
increased willingness of employees to hire strikebreakers in recent decades
according to the economic theory of labor markets, an individual spends time in nonmarket work when the:
individual can produce goods and services more cheaply than the market can
with the help of inclusive, or industrial, approach, a union tries to negotiate:
industry-wide wages for each class of labor
in a resource market, workers are rewarded based on:
their marginal productivity
a craft union can raise union members' wages by restricting labor supply:
through high initiation fees, long apprenticeship periods, or difficult, qualifying requirements