Ch.11 Labor Market
responsiveness to changes in wages
elasticity of demand for labor measures:
% change quantity(L)/% change in wage
elasticity of demand for labor=
the intersection of supply and demand
equilbirum occurs at :
VMP(L)=wage rate
in competitive firms profits are maximized when labor is hired to the point where
workers
in the market supply curve when wages rise _____ also rise
MPP(L)
is the additional output from adding 1 more worker
dual labor market hypothesis
labor market is split into primary and secondary sectors
industrial union
represents all workers employed in a specific industry
craft unio
represents members of a specific craft or occupation
10%-20% higher
the average union wage is __________________ than the average nonunion wage within the same industry
economic distrimination
workers of equal ability and productivity are paid different wages or are otherwise discriminated against
-change in product demand -changes in productivity -changes in the prices of other inputs
what causes shifts in labor demand
at higher wages
when does income effect dominate substitution effect?
at lower wages
when does substitution effect dominate income effect?
insider-outsider theory
workers ar segregated into union and nonunion sectors
income effect
workers choose fewer hours when wages rise and more hours when they fall
Substitution effect
workers choose more hours as wages rise and less hours as wages fall
limitations to beckers theory
-adjustment costs of firing unproductive workers can be high -women may be less willing to move -women may choose more flexible career paths that do not penalize for extended absences
benefits of union membership
-higher wages and job benefits -greater job security against arbitrary or vindictive management
costs of union memberhsip
-membership dues -costs of strikes -loss of some individual flexibility
MPP(L)xMR
MRP(L)=
MRP(L)
amount of additional revenue 1 worker earns for the firm
gary becker
argued that discrimination is economically detrimental to all parties
unions
associations of employees that bargain with employers over the terms and conditions of work
non-discriminating firms
can hire from a larger supply of workers at lower wages, resulting in lower costs and greater profits
discriminating firms
must pay higher wages for "preferred" workers, resulting in highers costs and lower profits
union shop
nonunion workers can be hired but must join within a specified time
agency shop
nonunion workers may be hired but must pay union dues for its services
job crowding hypothesis
occupations are broken into predominantly male and female jobs
segmented labor markets
occur when labor markets split into seperate parts, leading to wage differentials
closed shop
only union members are hired
positively
the market supply curve is ______ sloped.
the supply of labor
the time an individual is willings to work at various wage rates