The Labor Market

1 / 63
About This Presentation
Title:

The Labor Market

Description:

What s the point of this chapter? The Aggregate Supply curve is a relation between production and the price level. Production happens because firms hire workers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:3
Avg rating:3.0/5.0

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Labor Market


1
The Labor Market
2
Whats the point of this chapter?
  • The Aggregate Supply curve is a relation between
    production and the price level.
  • Production happens because firms hire workers
    (among other things).
  • The real cost of hiring workers is the real wage.
  • Higher price levels reduce the real wage.
  • Lower real wages cause firms to hire more workers
    and increase production.

3
Whats the point of this chapter? Cont.
  • Two complications
  • Workers want purchasing power in return for their
    work.
  • Since they sign contracts to work in the future,
    they care about the future price level.
  • Price level expectations may move more slowly
    than the actual price level.
  • Workers effort (which is difficult to monitor)
    and their bargaining power depends on the
    unemployment rate.
  • And on unemployment benefits, etc.

4
A Tour of the Labor Market
6-1
  • The noninstitutional civilian population are the
    number of people potentially available for
    civilian employment.
  • The civilian labor force is the sum of those
    either working or looking for work.
  • Those who are neither working nor looking for
    work are out of the labor force.
  • The participation rate is the ratio of the labor
    force to the noninstitutional civilian
    population.
  • The unemployment rate is the ratio of the
    unemployed to the labor force.

5
A Tour of the Labor Market
  • Population, Labor Force, Employment, and
    Unemployment in the United States (in millions),
    2000

6
The Large Flows of Workers
  • An unemployment rate may reflect two very
    different realities
  • A a labor market with many separations and many
    hires,
  • A labor market, with few separations, few hires,
    and a stagnant unemployment pool.
  • What is worse? To lose your job and get a new one
    12 times a year? Or to be unemployed for 6
    months?

7
The Large Flows of Workers
Average Monthly Flows Between Employment,
Unemployment, and Nonparticipation in the United
States, 1994-1999
  1. The flows of workers in and out of employment are
    large.
  2. The flows in and out of unemployment are large in
    relation to the number of unemployed.
  3. There are also large flows in and out of the
    labor force, much of them directly to and from
    employment.

8
The Large Flows of Workers
  • From the CPS data we conclude that
  • The flows of workers in and out of employment are
    large.
  • Separations consist of
  • Quits, or workers leaving their jobs for a better
    alternative, and
  • Layoffs, which come from changes in employment
    levels across firms.
  • The Current Population Survey (CPS) produces
    employment data, including the movements of
    workers.

9
The Large Flows of Workers
  • From the CPS data we conclude that
  • The flows in and out of unemployment are large in
    relation to the number of unemployed.
  • The average duration of unemployment is about
    three months.

10
The Large Flows of Workers
  • From the CPS data we conclude that
  • There are large flows in and out of the labor
    force, much of them directly to and from
    employment.
  • Discouraged workers are classified as out of the
    labor force, but they may take a job if they
    find it.
  • The nonemployment rate is the ratio of population
    minus employment to population.
  • Because it includes the discouraged, it might be
    a better measure of unemployment.

11
Movements inUnemployment
6-2
  • Fluctuations in the aggregate unemployment rate
    affect
  • The welfare of individual workers
  • Wages
  • Higher unemployment affects workers
  • Through a decrease in hiresmore difficult to
    find jobs.
  • Through higher layoffshigher risk of losing
    their jobs.

12
Movements in Unemployment
Movements in the U.S.Unemployment Rate, 1948-2000
  • Since 1948, the average yearly U.S. unemployment
    rate has fluctuated between 3 and 10.

13
Movements in Unemployment
The Unemployment Rate and the Proportionof
Unemployed Finding Jobs, 1968-1999
  • When unemployment is high, the proportion of
    unemployed finding jobs is low.

Note, the scale on the right is an inverse scale.
14
Movements in Unemployment
The Unemployment Rate and the Monthly Separation
Rate from Employment, 1968-1999
  • When unemployment is high, a higher proportion of
    workers lose their jobs.

15
Wage Determination
6-3
  • Collective bargaining is bargaining between firms
    and unions.
  • The result depends on each sides bargaining
    power, which in turn depends on each sides
    opportunity cost of not making the deal. For
    example
  • The skills of the worker compared to the skills
    required for the job
  • The current and expected unemployment rates
  • Going wages, social norms and laws regarding
    hiring and firing.
  • Etc.

16
Wage Determination
  • Common forces at work in the determination of
    wages
  • Wages are typically higher than the reservation
    wage, that is, the wage that make them
    indifferent between working or becoming
    unemployed.
  • I wont work unless you pay me more than 7 an
    hour.
  • Labor-market conditions.

17
Bargaining
  • How much bargaining power a worker has depends
    on
  • How costly it would be for the firm to replace
    himthe nature of the job.
  • How hard it would be for him to find another
    joblabor market conditions.
  • Its important to realize that, generally
    speaking, low-income workers have less bargaining
    power than potential employers.

18
Efficiency Wages
  • Should we pay you as low a wage as youll take?
  • If we do, we might lose you and well have to
    train someone else.
  • When unemployment is high, a higher proportion of
    workers lose their jobs.

19
Efficiency Wages
  • Efficiency wage theories are theories that link
    the productivity or the efficiency of workers to
    the wage they are paid.
  • These theories also suggest that wages depend on
    both the nature of the job and on labor-market
    conditions.
  • Efficiency wages are typically higher than
    market-clearing wages unemployment will result.

20
Wages, Prices, and Unemployment
  • The aggregate nominal wage, W, depends on three
    factors
  • The expected price level, Pe
  • The unemployment rate, u
  • A catchall variable, z, that catches all other
    variables that may affect the outcome of wage
    setting.

21
Wages, Prices, and Unemployment
  • Both workers and firms care about real wages
    (W/P), not nominal wages (W).
  • Suppose your job is to write a computer program.
    To do so, you spend 25,000 calories of energy
    i.e., youve given real effort to the firm.
  • Youll want to be paid back in stuff, in real
    purchasing power, so that you can at least buy
    25,000 calories worth of food.

22
Wages, Prices, and Unemployment
  • Workers also care about what wages theyll earn
    in the future, so their expectation of the price
    level, Pe, is key.
  • Suppose you know that 25,000 calories of energy
    cost 25 today.
  • But you are getting paid in 15 days.
  • In two weeks, 25,000 calories will cost 28.
    Which price level is relevant here?

23
Wages, Prices, and Unemployment
  • Higher unemployment weakens workers bargaining
    power, forcing them to accept lower wages.
  • Suppose you are the only available candidate with
    a bachelors degree in aerospace engineering.
    Boeing pays you whatever you want.
  • Suppose, now, that there are seven more people
    with bachelors degrees in aerospace engineering.
    They are all unemployed. Will you ask for that
    15 raise?

24
Wages, Prices, and Unemployment
  • If we divide this equation by P, we obtain
  • This allows us to draw a relation between the
    real wage W/P and unemployment u.
  • This relation has to be downward sloping because
    higher unemployment makes workers weaker on the
    negotiating table.

25
Wages and Unemployment
Higher unemployment reduces the bargaining power
of workers and encourages them to accept lower
real wages.
u
26
Wages, Prices, and Unemployment
  • Among other factors that affect wages is
    unemployment insurancethe payment of
    unemployment benefits to workers who lose their
    jobs. Higher unemployment insurance allows
    workers to hold out for higher wages. Minimum
    wages and employment protection are other
    factors.
  • Suppose the government pays you 150,000 a year
    in unemployment insurance. Do you care if you
    lose your job?

27
Wages, Unemployment, and Unemployment Benefits
Higher unemployment benefits reduces the
opportunity cost of unemployment, encouraging
workers to ask for higher wages at the given
unemployment rate.
u
28
Wages, Prices, and Unemployment
  • Its obvious that a change in price expectations
    will change the real wage that workers demand.
  • Suppose you expected prices to be fairly low.
    Then, in your nominal wage negotiations with your
    employer, youll make fairly low nominal wage
    demands.
  • But now suppose that prices actually turn out to
    be higher, so Pe/P lt 1. Then W/P will be
    relatively low.
  • Pe/P lt 1 may happen if an unexpected shock raises
    prices.

29
Wages, Unemployment, and Unemployment Benefits
If workers expect prices to be fairly low (Pe is
low), they will demand fairly low nominal wages,
W. But if prices P turn out to be higher, the
real wage W/P will be relatively low.
u
30
Price Determination
6-4
  • The production function is the relation between
    the inputs used in production and the quantity of
    output produced.
  • Assuming that firms produce goods using only
    labor, the production function can be written as

Y outputN employmentA labor productivity,
or output per worker
  • Further, assuming that one worker produces one
    unit of outputso that A 1, then, the
    production function becomes

31
Price Determination
  • If the production function is
  • then there are no fixed costs
  • and the only variable cost is the wage rate.
  • Then what is the cost of an additional unit of
    output?
  • W

32
Price Determination
  • If the cost of an additional unit of output is W,
    then W is firms marginal cost.
  • In perfect competition, P W.
  • If a firm charges more than marginal cost,
    consumers just go to one of a million
    competitors.
  • In imperfect competition, P gt W
  • Firms can charge more than marginal cost because
    there are few other firms selling a product that
    is similar enough.

33
Price Determination
  • Firms set their price according to
  • The term m is the markup of the price over the
    cost of production.
  • 1m is the difference between the marginal cost
    of labor (W) and the price (P).

34
Price Determination
  • 1m is the difference between the marginal cost
    of labor (W) and the price (P).
  • If markets are imperfectly competitive,m gt 0,
    and P gt W.
  • If all markets were perfectly competitive, m
    0, and P W.

P
P
MC
MC
DMR
D
MR
Q
Q
35
Price Determination
  • What determines m?
  • The market power of firms in the product market
    (firms may sell differentiated products or they
    may be oligopolists).

36
Price Determination
  • What determines m?
  • The market power of firms probably increases when
    the economy is doing well.
  • Its easier to sell and to raise prices (at any
    given wage) when unemployment is low ? the real
    wage falls.
  • The market power of firms probably decreases when
    the economy does poorly
  • Discounts, price cuts, and incentives become
    larger (at any given wage) when unemployment is
    high ? the real wage rises.

37
Price Determination
Higher unemployment means lower prices for a
given wage (or higher real wages).
u
38
The Natural Rateof Unemployment
6-5
  • Wage setting and price setting determine the
    equilibrium rate of unemployment.
  • Define the medium run as the period of time when
    price expectations are fulfilled or when people
    have adjusted their expectations to reality.
  • Therefore we assume that Pe P, so that this
    equation becomes this
    equation.

39
The Wage-Setting Relation
  • Earlier, we stated that the nominal wage rate was
    determined as follows
  • Now, since Pe P,

The wage-setting relation Workers and firms set
real wages depending on unemployment and other
things.
40
Wages and Unemployment
Higher unemployment reduces the bargaining power
of workers and encourages them to accept lower
real wages.
u
41
The Price-Setting Relation
  • The price-determination equation is
  • If we divide both sides by W, we get

42
The Price-Setting Relation
  • To state this equation in terms of the wage rate,
    we invert both sides

The price-setting relation Firms set prices (at
given nominal wages) depending on their degree of
monopoly power.
43
Price Determination
Higher unemployment means lower prices for a
given wage (or higher real wages).
u
44
Wages and Unemployment
PS relation Higher unemployment means lower
prices for a given wage (or higher real wages).
WS relation Higher unemployment reduces the
bargaining power of workers and encourages them
to accept lower real wages.
u
45
Wages and Unemployment
Greater monopoly power allows firms to increase
the difference between W and P, at any u,
reducing W / P.
PS relation High u lowers prices and raises W/P.
WS relation High u weakens workers and lowers
real wages.
u
46
Price Determination
  • For simplicity well assume m gt 0.
  • Assume m doesnt depend on unemployment, but that
    it does depend on structural characteristics such
    as anti-Trust enforcement.

47
Price Determination
Unemployment doesnt affect how firms set prices
or wages.
u
48
Price Determination
Greater monopoly powerincreases the difference
between W and P,reducing W / P.
u
49
Wage-Setting and Price-Setting
The Wage-Setting Relation, the Price-Setting
Relation, and the Natural Rate of Unemployment
  • Real wages are set by workers and firms as a
    decreasing function of the unemployment rate.
  • The real wage implied by firms price-setting
    (given nominal wages) is constant, independent of
    the unemployment rate.

50
Equilibrium Real Wagesand Unemployment
The Wage-Setting Relation, the Price-Setting
Relation, and the Natural Rate of Unemployment
  • The natural rate of unemployment is the
    unemployment rate such that the real wage chosen
    in wage setting is equal to the real wage implied
    by price setting.

51
Equilibrium Real Wagesand Unemployment
  • We can solve the Wage-Setting / Price-Setting
    model for the equilibrium unemployment rate, or
    natural rate of unemployment, un.
  • Eliminating W/P from the wage-setting and the
    price-setting relations

n
52
Equilibrium Real Wagesand Unemployment
  • The equilibrium unemployment rate, or natural
    rate of unemployment, un

un depends on the shape ofthe function Fon
unemployment benefitson the degree of market
power of firms
53
Equilibrium Real Wagesand Unemployment
Unemployment Benefits and the Natural Rate of
Unemployment
  • An increase in unemployment benefits leads to an
    increase in the natural rate of unemployment.

54
Equilibrium Real Wagesand Unemployment
Markups and the Natural Rate of Unemployment
  • An increase in markups decreases the real wage,
    and leads to an increase in the natural rate of
    unemployment.

Monopolists produce less than perfect
competitors then fewer people are hired.
55
Actual Unemployment versus Natural Unemployment
  • Can the actual rate of unemployment be
    different from the natural rate of
    unemployment?
  • This is a medium term model.
  • In the short-term, many kinds of inflexibilities
    will prevent the economy from adjusting.
  • Unemployment changes more slowly than most other
    macroeconomic variables.

56
Movements in Unemployment
Movements in the U.S.Unemployment Rate, 1948-2000
  • Labor hoarding causes unemployment to rises
    slowly after the recession begins, and to stay
    high even after the recession ends.

57
Actual Unemployment versus Natural Unemployment
  • When will u be different from un?
  • When expected prices are higher than actual
    prices Pe gt P.
  • If people expect high prices, theyll demand high
    wages
  • At every level of unemployment, workers will
    demand a high W/P.
  • This means that workers will require W/P gt
    1/(1m).
  • Because firms will only pay W/P 1/(1m), they
    wont hire as many workers.

58
Actual Unemployment versus Natural Unemployment
  • If Pegt P, workers will require high nominal
    wages, so workers require W/P gt 1/(1m)
  • Unemployment will rise because firms dont hire.
  • As workers bargaining power weakens, they lower
    their nominal wage requests, untilW/P 1/(1m).
  • The actual rate of unemployment will be higher
    than the natural rate of unemployment, ugtun.

59
Actual Unemployment versus Natural Unemployment
Expected Prices and the Actual Rate of
Unemployment
  • If expected prices are higher than actual prices
    Pegt P, nominal wage demands will be too high,
    leading to a rise in unemployment.
  • Then ugtun.

60
The Structural Rate of Unemployment
  • Because the equilibrium rate of unemployment
    reflects the structure of the economy, a better
    name for the natural rate of unemployment is the
    structural rate of unemployment.
  • I.e., it depends on institutions and behavior
  • Unemployment benefits
  • Peoples reactions to being unemployed
  • Industrial organization
  • Other factors.

61
What next?
  • This is all very nice, but whats the connection
    with Aggregate Supply?
  • Wage-setting and price-setting determine the
    economys actual level of unemployment and the
    natural level of unemployment.
  • The level of unemployment implies the level of
    employment.
  • The level of employment implies output.

62
From Unemployment to Employment
  • The natural rate of unemployment ? a natural
    level of employment.

The unemployment rate
  • Employment in terms of the labor force and the
    unemployment rate equals

The level of employment
  • The natural level of employment, Nn, is given by

The natural level of employment
63
From Employment to Output
  • A natural level of employment ? a natural level
    of output, (and since YN, then,)

Employment ? output
  • The natural level of output satisfies the
    following

The structure of the economy ? Yn
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)