3.5 Labour Market Flashcards
(41 cards)
Define wage rate
the wage rate represents the price of labour, which provides an income to households and represents a cost to firms
Differentiate between a nominal wage and a real wage
nominal: express the value of a wage which is not adjusted to take into account inflation.
real: the value of a wage, adjusted for inflation
Define demand for labour
how many workers an employer is willing and able to hire at a given wage rate in a given time period
the higher the wage rate, the lower the demand
Factors which determine a firm’s demand for labour
1) wage rate - movement along the curve
2) demand for the g/s
3) labour productivity
4) profitability of the firm
5) non-wage costs
6) substitutes for labour
7) number of buyers of labour
Define supply of labour
The number of hours that new and existing workers are willing and able to supply at a given wage rate in a given time peiod
The higher the wage rate, the higher the QS. More individuals will be incentivised to join
Factors which determine an individuals supply of labour
1) wage rate - movement along
2) wages in sub occupations
3) demographic factors - working pop
4) net migration (people coming in/leaving, if immigrants>emigrants = positive NM)
5) non-wage benefits of working - fringe benefits
6) improvements in mobility of labour
7) trade unions
Work and labour trade off
Explain the backwards bending S curve of Labour
As wage rates rise, at first a worker is prepared to work more.
At very high wage rates, workers are prepared to spend LESS of their time at work because OF THE SUBSTITUTON AND INCOME EFFECTS.
As the leisure time becomes more scarce, the substitution effect says that WE HAVE A CHOICE WHAT TO DO WITH OUR TIME – WE ARE WILLING TO GIVE UP OUR LEISURE TIME AT A PRICE. AS LEISURE TIME GETS MORE SCARCE, WE NEED A HIGHER WAGE RATE TO GIVE UP THE NEXT MARGINAL HOUR OF OUR LEISURE TIME. We will continue to substitute leisure time for work if THE WAGE RATE IS ATTRACTIVE ENOUGH.
How does the graph work? Is only one effect in operation at any one time? Explain. INCOME AND SUBSTITUTION EFFECTS HAPPEN SIMULTANEOUSLY. WE HAVE A TARGE LEVEL OF INCOME THAT WILL PROVIDE US FOR THE LIFESTYLE WE WISH TO LIVE. WE WILL WORK ENOUGH TIME NEEDED TO DELIVER THAN INCOME TO DELIVER FOR US THAT LIFESTYLE. IF OUR WAGE RATE RISES, WE DON’T NEED TO WORK SO MUCH. THEREFORE AT HIGHER INCOME LEVELS, WE WILL WORK FEWER HOURS AND ENJOY MORE LIESURE TIME.
Graduates may be on very high salaries due to the number of hours they work
How does the income effect explain early retirement? A TARGET AMOUNT OF INCOME HAS BEEN ACHIEVED AND SO EMPLOYEE DECIDES NOT TO WORK ANY LONGER. THE OPPORTUNITY COST OF LEISURE TIME IS TOO GREAT.
In many jobs, there isn’t much flexibility of number of hours
What are the suitability of labour and work effected by
age
direct taxes (higher income tax will decrease the S and increase utility of leisure)
dependency ratio: i.e having children
non-labour income: can come from assets like renting or can come prom pension
Define unemployment, unemployment rate, underemployment, the participant rate
“Unemployment” refers to those who are not in work but who are willing, able and actively seeking work.
“Unemployment rate” means the number of individuals not in work but willing and able (actively seeking) to work, divided by the total labour force. It is expressed as a percentage.
“Participation rate” means the number of individuals in work, divided by the total labour force. It is expressed as a percentage.
“Underemployment” refers to those individuals who could work a greater number of hours, if those hours were available, or to those who are employed in jobs which are beneath their skill level.
Imperfectly competitive labour markets
The firm is a dominant or monopoly buyer of labour and is therefore a monopsonist, but where there is a large number of workers.
Monopoly supplier of labour – ie trade union.
Bilateral monopoly - The firm is a monopoly buyer of labour/monopsonist and there is a monopoly supplier of labour.
Define Marginal Revenue Product
is the contribution that an additional employee makes to the revenue of the firm. EG if I make 8 units and the sale price per unit is £10, the MRP of my employment = £80. The MRP curve shows the price that a firm would be willing to pay for an extra unit of labour and therefore represents the demand for labour.
Define Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns
marginal output will eventually start to decline if increasing units of a variable factor (labour) are added to a fixed factor. For this reason, Marginal Revenue Product falls as output rises.
Define Marginal Cost of Labour
the cost to the firm of employing an additional worker.
What is a monopsonist
A monopsonist is a single buyer of labour, and is the wage maker. It will use its power to reduce the wages and is also likely to reduce employment level
Draw + explain a wage rates graph (theme 3)
mc of labour and ac of labour
DL = MRP
A monopsonist will employ people where MRP=AC, profit maximising at Q1,W1
The monopsony power allows them to pay extremely low wages at W3 Q2 where MC=MRP
Wage paid by monopsony W3, b, Q2, 0
Wages lost for underpayment by employer W2, a, b, W3
Not paying W2 leads to exploitation of workers
Define trade union
A trade union is an organisation of workers who combine together to further their interests. Trade unions use collective bargaining with employers to protect their members
Trade union key roles
1) protecting/improving living standards and wages
2) protecting workers from unfair dismissal
3) promoting improvements in working conditions, work life balance and health and safety issues
Show the effect of trade unions on wages
[minimum price graph]
[collective bargaining makes wages artificially high and reduces the quantity]
trade unions may bid for employers to pay higher wages, this leads to a contraction in demand to Q2.
W2,a, b, W1 - higher income from collective union
Q1, Q2, b, c - lost wage income from contraction unemployment (some suffer - a to d)
Trade Union - kinked supply curve
Employment will fall from Q1 to Q2 as a result of the higher wage rate. If the business wishes to employ more staff above Q3 it will need to pay a higher wage rate than W2
What will the impact of trade unions depend on
- elasticity of demand (the more inelastic, the more success trade unions will have)
- proportion of workers in the union (they are more influential when they represent a higher %)
- pay bargaining outcomes: worker wages may rise if unions and employees agree a pay deal based on success
Why did trade union memberships decline
“loss of good quality jobs”
rise of gig economy: 0 hours contract, no employment rights
osterity: proportion of people working in the public sector declined
4 million employed in the public sector in 2020
24% are in trade unions
BOOKLET FOR LABOUR MARKETS 3
Define National Minimum Wage
The lowest that firms are legally allowed to pay employees