2-SIDED SEARCH MODEL Flashcards

1
Q

We use a simplified version of … model

A

DMP = Diamond, Mortensen and Pissarides.

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2
Q

How many consumers?

A

N

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3
Q

How many in LF?

A

Q

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4
Q

Consumers join the LF based on…

A

the expected payoff to searching for a job.

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5
Q

Supply curve =

A

P(Q) = the expected payoff needed to induce Q consumers to search for a job. (i.e. be part of LF)

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6
Q

Firms can only produce if…

A

They post and vacancy and hire 1 worker

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7
Q

Cost of posting vacancy =

A

K = in terms of final good

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8
Q

Number of firms posting vacancies =

A

A = number of vacancies since each firm only posts 1.

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9
Q

Z =

A

Output produced by the worker / productivity of the worker.

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10
Q

Search frictions imply that

A

Not all workers searching for a job will find one, and not all firms searching for a worker will find one = can have unemployed workers & vacancies at the same time.

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11
Q

Matching fucntion

A

M = em(Q, A)

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12
Q

e =

A

the efficiency of the matching process for given level of A and Q.

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13
Q

4 properties of m(Q, A)

A
  1. CRS
  2. 0 if any Q or A 0
  3. Increasing in Q and A
  4. Diminishing marginal products - increase in matches induced by extra Q/A larger if A/Q smaller.
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14
Q

Probability of consumers finding a job =

A

Pc = M / Q = em(Q, A) / Q = em(1, j) by CRS

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15
Q

j =

A

j = A / Q = labour market tightness from firm’s perspective.

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16
Q

High j =

A

Good for consumers

Bad for firms since lots of A but fewer Q

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17
Q

Expected consumer payoff from searching in equilibrium =

A
P(Q) = pcw + (1-pc)b
P(Q) = b + em(1, j)(w - b)
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18
Q

How does j affect P(Q)?

A

higher j =easier for workers to find a job = higher P(Q) = higher Q i.e. LF participation.

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19
Q

Probability of firms filling a vacancy

A

Pf = M / A = em(Q, A) / A = em(1/j, 1) by CRS

20
Q

What do we assume about firms?

A

FREE ENTRY –> firms post vacancies until expected payoff = 0 otherwise more firms would enter and post vacancies.

21
Q

Firm free entry conditon

A

Pf(Z - W - K) = (1-Pf)K

em(1/j, 1) = k / (z - w)

22
Q

Given that the free entry equality must hold, what happens if K rises?

A

K rises = higher cost to post vacancy = RHS rises

For firm to still be indifferent, need LHS rise too = lower j = easier to find workers

23
Q

How is equilibrium wage determined?

A

According to Nash bargaining theory

24
Q

2 things the outcome of wage bargaining depends on

A
  1. relative bargaining power

2. next-best alternative

25
Q

Worker, firm and total surplus from an agreement

A

worker surplus = w - b
firm = z - w
Total = z - b

26
Q

What else does Nash assume about bargaining process?

A

That each part receives a fraction of total surplus. a = worker bargaining power.

27
Q

SO: equilibrium wage =

A

W = az + (1-a)b

28
Q

Supply-side equilibrium equation

A

P(Q) = b + em(1, j) a(z-b)

29
Q

demand-side equilibrium equation

A

em(1/j, 1) = k/(1-a)(z-b)

30
Q

Urate in equilibrium =

A

U = Q(1-pc)/Q = (1-pc) = 1 - em(1, j)

31
Q

Vacancy rate in equilibrium =

A

V = A(1-Pf)/A = (1-pf) = 1 - em(1/j, 1)

32
Q

Aggregate output

A

Y = Mz = Qem(1, j)z

33
Q

How does a productivity shock affect demand side?

A

Higher z = higher firm surplus from posting vacancy.

To be kept indifferent, need Pf to fall = j rises = more labour market tightness.

34
Q

How does a productivity shock affect supply side? (2)

A
  1. Movement along P(Q): from firm’s response, j rises = move along P(Q) = Q rises
  2. P(Q) shifts up since higher z = bargain higher w = P(Q) rises for given level of j
35
Q

SO how does productivity shock affect the economy?

A

LF participation increases
pf falls = vacancy rate rises
pc rises as j rises = u rate falls

36
Q

does 2-sided model explain data well in productivity shock?

A
  1. LR: explains higher LF due to higher z, but not since 2000.
  2. explains BC changes in urate, vrate and LF qualitatively, but not quantitatively.
37
Q

How could we improve the 2 sided model to make fluctuations in unemployment more data consistent?

A

Include wage rigidity as well.

38
Q

Impact of higher b demand-side

A

Higher b = workers can bargain higher wages = less attractive to open vacancies. To keep firms indifferent, need pf to rise = j falls so it’s easier to find workers.

39
Q

Impact of higher b supply-side

A
  1. j falls = Q contracts along curve in response to firm response as fewer vacancies
  2. But shift up as higher b = greater incentive to be in LF, plus can negotiate higher wages = Q rises
    So overall effect on LF and GDP ambiguous.
40
Q

Hw does higher b affect vacancy rate?

A

V = 1 - pf = 1 - em(1/j, 1)

Higher b means j must fall as compensation = lower vacancy rate.

41
Q

Hw does higher b affect urate?

A

U = 1 - pc = 1 - em(1, j)

j falls = U rises

42
Q

Micro vs macro ways b increases unemployment

A
Micro = one-sided model = higher U due to higher reservation wage.
Macro = 2 sided = higher U due to lower vacancies.
43
Q

Micro evidence on impact of b on urate

A

Meyer 1990
Just before benefits about to expire, Pc rises = Moral hazard - look harder for job / accept lower offer when benefits about to expire.§

44
Q

Macro evidence on impact of b on urate

A

Compare US states after Great recession as changes in b different, but other characteristics the same. b led to slow recovery of employment.

45
Q

Why may higher b in a recession not actually be that harmful?

A

Because high U mainly due to few vacancies, not about search effort.