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35hour workweek

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News-Press 10/8, p. 11. Or New York Times web site. 'Lump of Labor Poor Excuse for Jobs Deficit' ... Classical Economics. Assumes prices, wages are flexible ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 35hour workweek


1
35-hour workweek
  • France is studying impact of national legislation
    mandating a 35-hour work week.
  • Implemented by the Jospin government (socialists)
  • Questioned by the conservatives, who are now in
    power

2
  • Socialists theres a lot of unemployment in
    France this can be reduced if each person works
    fewer hours
  • Conservatives High unemployment is due to high
    unemployment compensation
  • Legislating 35-hour week reduces Frances
    competitiveness.
  • WSJ 10/8

3
Krugman article
  • News-Press 10/8, p. 11
  • Or New York Times web site.
  • Lump of Labor Poor Excuse for Jobs Deficit
  • Lump-of-labor fallacy theres fixed number of
    jobs
  • Automation will it reduce the of jobs?

4
Krugman, continued
  • Conservatives commentators use the fallacy to
    argue that the failure of employment to increase
    isnt attributable to the failure of Bush policy
  • Bush policy tax cuts for the rich
  • Krugman no reason to expect this to create
    jobs, and it hasnt.

5
Classical Economics
  • Chapter 7

6
Classical Economics
  • Neoclassical economics (same thing, for our
    purposes)
  • 18th, 19th century economists
  • Adam Smith (1776), David Ricardo (1810), John
    Stuart Mill (1848), Alfred Marshall (1890)
  • Term due to John Maynard Keynes, General Theory
    of Employment, Interest and Money (1936)
  • No (adequate) theory of business fluctuations
    before Keynes
  • Still true today (?)

7
Classical Economics
  • Assumes prices, wages are flexible
  • Therefore there is no involuntary unemployment
  • Everyone in this room is an unemployed mail
    carrier
  • But are we involuntarily unemployed?
  • Theory of business fluctuations would be in
    Volume II, which never got written
  • But there were very severe episodes of
    unemployment
  • 1890s, Great Depression

8
Keynesian economics
  • Prices and wages are inflexible (over the short
    run)
  • In fact, this is pretty much the definition of
    the short run, for the purposes of macroeconomics
  • Keynesian economists thought, and think, the
    short run might last a long time, and is
    important
  • Classical economists thought, and think, that the
    short run is really short, and isnt important
  • In this chapter were looking at classical
    economics
  • Keynesian economics is different.
  • Consistent with micro?
  • Brought in the macro-micro distinction

9
Review of (the relevant) Micro
  • Classical macroeconomics looks at macroeconomic
    phenomena using microeconomic analysis
  • Keynesian macroeconomics uses different theory
    (especially in the early years after Keynes wrote
    in 1936)

10
Main analytical tool
  • aggregate production function
  • Assume one good corn that can be either eaten
    now or saved (invested) as seed
  • Capital saved up past consumption good
  • Save (invest) a lot and youll have less corn to
    eat now, but more in the future

11
Aggregate production function
  • Aggregate output depends on capital (stored up
    corn saved in the past) and labor
  • And maybe also land but well be ignoring that
  • Characterize it by isoquants combinations of
    factors that yield a given level of output

12
Isoquants
  • An isoquant shows the labor-capital combinations
    that produce a given level of output.
  • Each isoquant should be labeled with how much
    output is produced.
  • Isoquants that lie upward and to the right are
    associated with higher output levels

13
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14
Aggregate production function
  • You can look at the aggregate production function
    in a different way graph output as a function
    of the labor input, holding capital constant at a
    given level.
  • Or vice versa output as a function of capital,
    holding constant the labor input (that is, output
    per worker).

15
Aggregate production function
  • Here were holding constant the level of the
    capital input

16
Principle of Diminishing Returns
  • As you add one factor, holding the other(s)
    constant, output increases but at a diminishing
    rate
  • Check it out on the preceding diagram the curve
    gets flatter

17
Marginal Product of Labor
  • Can graph labor input (holding constant capital,
    as above) against marginal product of labor

18
Real wages
  • In this one-good world, there arent any relative
    prices.
  • No money so far, so no nominal prices
  • The only relevant price is the real wage
  • wage per week expressed in units of corn

19
Equilibrium in the factor market
  • Assume that the amount of capital a given firm
    has is fixed.
  • Under constant returns to scale, which we are
    assuming, this just determines the size of the
    firm
  • How much labor will the firm hire?
  • Until marginal product of labor real wage
  • Otherwise it couldnt be maximizing profit
  • (This is assuming pure competition the firm
    cant influence price, so the additional to
    revenue is proportional to the marginal product
    of labor)

20
Amount of labor hired
21
Demand for Labor
  • This means that the firms demand for labor
    (meaning demand for labor curve) coincides with
    the marginal product of labor curve!

22
Labor demand
  • Note that this curve is identical, except for
    relabeling of the vertical axis!

23
Conclusion
  • If the real wage is high, firms will hire very
    little labor (in relation to capital), and
    conversely
  • Think US vs. India

24
Equilibrium
  • We have been talking about the theory of the firm
  • I.e., about what will the firm do when it faces
    given factor prices (in this case, given real
    wage)?
  • Now we go to the equilibrium problem put all
    the firms together.
  • What determines the equilibrium level of the real
    wage?
  • Assume no flows of labor or capital across
    countries

25
Equilibrium Real Wage
  • The equilibrium values of factor prices
    specifically, the wage -- must cause firms to
    demand factors in the proportions they exist in
    the country
  • Suppose that the amount of labor and capital in a
    country are fixed (no immigration, capital
    export, etc.)
  • Equilibrium real wages will be high in a country
    with a lot of capital and not much labor (US)
  • And low in the opposite case (Mexico, India)
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