Modern Labor Economics: Overview of The Labor Market
Modern Labor Economics: Overview of The Labor Market
Modern Labor Economics: Overview of The Labor Market
CHAPTER 2
Overview of the Labor
Market
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Chapter Outline
The Labor Market: Definitions, Facts, and
Trends
• The Labor Force and Unemployment
• Industries and Occupation: Adapting to Change
• The Earnings of Labor
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
2.1 The Labor Market: Definitions, Facts, and Trends
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.2 Unemployment Rates for the Civilian Labor Force, 1947–2012 (detailed data
in table inside front cover)
Unemployment rate
is the ratio of those
unemployed (U) to
those in the labor
force (LF):
•Varies from year to
year, by region, by state,
by gender, and by race
•Tends to be low when
the labor market is tight
and high when the labor
market is loose, which
happened in 2009.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
2.1 The Labor Market: Definitions, Facts, and Trends
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
2.1 The Labor Market: Definitions, Facts, and Trends
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
2.1 The Labor Market: Definitions, Facts, and Trends
The CPI
•Some of the problems with the use CPI as measure of
changes in the purchasing power of workers are:
Consumer change the bundle of goods and services
they buy over time in response to changes in prices but
not reflected in the bundle with which the CPI is
computed.
The quality of goods and services change over time but
the CPI does not account for changes in quality.
•Given these and other problems, some economists believe
that the CPI has overstated the inflation by as much as 1%
point per year.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Using the CPI to convert present values into past values and vice versa – see row 4
for 1980, 1990, and 2012:
Computations 1980 1990 2012
Row 3: $6.85 $10.20 $19.77
x100 $8.61
x100 $8.31 x100 $7.80
82.4 229.6
130.7
Row 4: 229.6 229.6 229.6
x $6.85 $19.09 x $10.20 $17.92 x $19.77 $19.77
82.4 130.7 229.6
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
2.1 The Labor Market: Definitions, Facts, and Trends
Wages, Earnings, Compensation, and Income
•Wages refer to the payment for a unit of time/hour worked.
•Earnings refer to wages multiplied by the number of time
units/hours worked.
•Employee Benefits can be either payments in kind or deferred
Examples of payments in kind are employer-provided health care,
health insurance, and paid vacation time.
Examples of deferred payments are employer-financed retirement
benefits – Social Security taxes – set aside money that enables
employees to receive pensions later.
•Total compensation consists of earnings plus employee
benefits.
•Income received by a family includes earnings, benefits, and
unearned income, which included dividends or interest received
on investment and government transfer payments.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.4 Relationship among Wages, Earnings, Compensation, and Income
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2.2 How the Labor Market Works
Firms must successfully operate in the labor market, the
capital market, and the product market if they are to survive
Firms purchase inputs – labor (L) and capital (K) used in
the production of goods and services – from the labor
market and the capital market, respectively
The study of the labor market begins and ends with an
analysis of the demand for and the supply of labor
• Employers/Firms demand for labor from different labor markets
• Employees/Workers supply their labor services
Remember that the major labor market outcomes are
related to:
(a) the terms of employment (wages, compensation levels,
working conditions) and
(b) the levels of employment.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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Figure 2.5 The Markets in Which Firms Must Operate
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2.2 How the Labor Market Works
The Demand for Labor
Firms combine L and K to produce goods and services that
are sold in the product market.
Firms’ total output (Q) and their mix of inputs (L and K)
depend on three forces:
• Output or product demand (QD).
• The amount of L and K acquired at given prices: wages
(W) for L and rental cost (rK) or price (pK) for K.
• Choice of technology (T ) available to firms.
Demand for labor: LD = f (W, QD, T )
where LD = labor demand or the desired level of
employment by the firm, W = wage rate, QD = output or
product demand, and T = technology.
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If QD and T are held constant, then LD = g(W ), see Table 2.3.
Wage Changes
• An increase in wage will lead to:
A scale or output effect – the reduction in the scale of
production or output due to the reduction in employment.
A substitution effect – capital is substituted for labor in the
production process.
Table 2.3
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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Figure 2.6 Labor Demand Curve (based on data in Table 2.3)
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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2.2 How the Labor Market Works
Changes in Other Forces Affecting Demand
•If the demand for the product (QD) increases, holding other
factors (L, W, K, rK or pK, and T ) constant, this will lead to scale
or output effect as firms try to maximize profits; thus leading to
an increase in labor demand.
The labor demand curve shifts to the right at every possible
wage level indicated in Table 2.3 – see Figure 2.7.
•If the supply of capital changed and rK or pK fell by 50%, but
other factors remained unchanged, more K would be used in
production process – generates two opposite effects for LD:
If the scale effect dominates, more workers will be required as
well, thus LD will shift to the right – see Figure 2.8 (a).
If the substitution effect dominates as firm adopt more capital-
intensive technologies in response to cheaper capital, LD will shift
to the left – see Figure 2.8 (b).
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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Figure 2.7 Shift in Demand for Labor Due to Increase in Product Demand
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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Figure 2.8 Possible Shifts in Demand for Labor Due to Fall in Capital Prices
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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2.2 How the Labor Market Works
Market, Industry, and Firm Demand
•The demand for labor can be analyzed on three levels
Firm level – to analyze the demand for labor by a particular firm, we
see how an increase in the wage rate of machinists affects their level
of employment by a particular aircraft manufacturer.
Industry level – to analyze the effect of this wage increase on the
employment of machinists in the entire aircraft industry, we utilize an
industry demand curve.
Market – to see how the wage increase affects the entire labor
market for machinists in all industries in which they are used, we use
a market demand curve.
Market Supply
• If the market wage for legal assistants (or “paralegals”)
increases and the salaries and wages in other occupations
are held constant, more workers would want to become
paralegals:
Labor supply of paralegals will be upward-sloping – see Figure 2.9
The quantity of labor supply will be positively related to the wage
rate, holding other wages constant.
• Other factors such as changes in the wage rate of insurance
agents, but the wage rate (W ) of paralegals is unchanged, the
L
Modern curve of paralegals will shift to the left – see
SLabor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith
Figure
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Figure 2.9 Market Supply Curve for Paralegals
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.10 Shift in Market Supply Curve for Paralegals as Salaries of Insurance
Agents Rise
Supply of Paralegals when
Salaries of Insurance Agents Are:
Wages for
Paralegals
High
Low
Number of Paralegals
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
2.2 How the Labor Market Works
Supply to Firms
•We assume that the labor market for paralegals is perfectly
competitive, and that no firm will offer a wage that is above or
below what the market wage indicates – firms are wage takers:
Labor supply curves of paralegals to a firm are horizontal
– see Figure 2.11.
At the on-going wage of W0, employers can hire all the paralegals
they need and each employer faces S0 supply curve.
If the paralegal wage falls from W0 to W1, employers can still hire as
much as they want at the lower wage, and each firm’s or employer’s
labor supply curve becomes S1 with the same slope as the supply
curve S0.
• Note that a fall in the wage rate of paralegal does not mean
withdrawals from the paralegal profession into the insurance
agent market because they are not perfect substitutes.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.11 Supply of Paralegals to a Firm at Alternative Market Wages
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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2.2 How the Labor Market Works
The Determination of the Wage
The wage rate that prevails in the labor market depends on
LD and LS, regardless of whether labor unions and/or
nonmarket factors are involved – see Figure 2.12.
The Market-Clearing Wage
•The wage rate (We) at which LD equals LS is the market-
clearing wage – that is, no labor surplus and/or no labor
shortage.
•For any wage (W1) lower than We: LD > LS → EDL, and with
adjustments from employers/demanders, wage rises to We.
•For any wage (W2) higher than We: LD < LS → ESL, and with
adjustments from workers/suppliers, wage falls to We.
•We becomes the going wage that individual employers and
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
employees face – see Figures 2.12 and 2.13.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.12 Market Demand and Supply
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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Figure 2.13 Demand and Supply at the “Market” and “Firm” Levels
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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2.2 How the Labor Market Works
Disturbing the Equilibrium
•Changes in labor demand or changes in labor supply or the
simultaneous changes in labor demand and supply will
change the equilibrium wage (We) and employment (L):
If LD shifts to the right, We rises to We* – see Figure 2.14.
If LS shifts to the left, We rises to We’ – see Figure 2.15.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.15 New Labor Market Equilibrium after Supply Shifts Left
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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Figure 2.16 New Labor Market Equilibrium after Supply Shifts Right
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
2.2 How the Labor Market Works
Disequilibrium and Nonmarket Influences
•The labor market is subject to forces that impede the
adjustment of both wages and employment to changes in
supply or demand:
Changing jobs often requires an employee to invest in new
skills or bear the costs of moving.
Hiring workers can involve an initial investment in search and
training, while firing them or cutting their wages can be
perceived as unfair, which may affect moral and productivity.
• Other barriers to adjustment are rooted in nonmarket
forces:
Government programs or laws such as minimum wage laws
usually serve to keep wages above market levels, which could
result in widespread unemployment.
Customs or institutions (labor unions) also constrain the
choices
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and Public Policy, Twelfth
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2.3 Applications of the Theory
Who Is Underpaid and Who Is Overpaid?
The concepts of underpayment and overpayment have to do
with the social issue of producing goods and services in the
least-costly way, hence the comparison of overpayment and
underpayment with market-clearing wage.
Above-Market Wages
•Workers whose wages are higher than the market-clearing
wage are considered to be overpaid – two implications:
Employers are paying more than necessary to produce their
output: (WH > We).
More workers want jobs than they can find: Y > V → ESL
– see Figure 2.17.
•Wage reduction close to the level dictated by the market would
be Pareto-improving.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.17 Effects of an Above-Market Wage
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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2.3 Applications of the Theory
Below-Market Wages
•Employees whose wages are below market-clearing levels are
considered to be underpaid:
At below-market wages, employers face labor shortages due
to WL < We – see Figure 2.18.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.18 Effects of a Below-Equilibrium Wage
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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2.3 Applications of the Theory
Economic Rents
•With respect to the labor market, economic rents can be
defined as the difference between the wage workers are
actually paid on a job and the workers’ reservation wages.
Economic rents sum the area between the market-clearing wage
and the labor supply curve – see Figure 2.19.
•The labor supply curve of any occupation or industry is a
schedule of reservation wages that indicates the labor
forthcoming at each wage level – each worker potentially has a
different reservation wage, hence rents will differ for each.
•The reservation wage of a worker is the wage below which the
worker would refuse (or quit) the job in question.
It is the opportunity cost to the individual worker for giving up hours
of leisure for market work.
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
Figure 2.19 Labor Supply to the Military: Different Preferences Imply Different
“Rents”
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.
2.3 Applications of the Theory
Unemployment and Responses to Technological Change
Across Countries
The strength of nonmarket forces: government programs, laws,
customs or institutions (labor unions) varies across countries.
Theoretically, if wages are held above the market-clearing levels,
there will be excess supply of labor (ESL or unemployment), and
this ESL or unemployment would worsen if the labor demand
curve shifts to the left.
Nonmarket forces, which can prolong the duration of
unemployment, are probably much stronger in most of
Europe than in North America.
• Unemployment rates are much higher in most European countries
because of their generous unemployment compensation programs
and laws (severance pay).
Modern Labor Economics: Theory and Public Policy, Twelfth Edition Copyright ©2015 by Pearson Education, Inc.
Ronald G. Ehrenberg • Robert S. Smith All rights reserved.