Title: Labor, Employment
1Labor, Employment And Wages
Samuel Bowles Santa Fe Institute University of
Siena
Diego Rivera, The Ford Plant River Rouge
2Employment what is the principal agent problem?
- e 0 0,1 effort per hour of work (e.g. of
time on) - Per period output is
- y y(he) µ , with y'gt0 and y" lt0
- where h is the number of worker "hours" hired
- µ is a mean zero disturbance term.
- the employer selects
- i) termination probability t(e,m)00,1
(telt0 and tmgt0 - ii) a wage rate, w, and
- iii) monitoring expenditure per hour of
labor hired, m - the worker selects e to max his present value
of utility - the worker is paid, and is renewed or
terminated, the latter occurring with probability
t(e,m).
3The Workers Best Response
- Per period utility (experienced at the end of the
period) u u(w,e) - Fallback asset Z what is it?
- Present value of the job (game is stationary)
- V u(w,e)(1-t(e,m))Vt(e,m)Z'(1i)
- V u(w,e)-iZ'(it(e,m) Z
- The worker selects e so as to set Ve 0
- which requires ue te(V-Z)
- Interpretation of the foc?
- Given that P knows As brf, he also knows the
resulting e. Why then is there a P-A problem?
4The Workers Fallback Position
- At the end of each period there is a probability
? that the unemployed worker will find work,
exiting the unemployment pool, so the expected
duration of unemployment is 1/?. - Thus
- Z u(b,0)?V(1-?)Z'(1i) u(b,0)?V'(i ?)
5Employees best response function ue te(V-Z)
6Profit Maximizing
- p y(he(w,mZ)) - (wm)h
- ph y'e - (wm) 0
- pw y'hew - h 0
- pm y'hem - h 0
- which requires that
- ew e/(wm) em
- y' (wm)/e
- Meaning of the second foc?
7The Solow condition ew e/(wm) em
- What does it mean?
- Show that a Walrasian equilibrium is a special
case of this model. - What does it require of the nature of work and
the scarcity of goods?
8Comparative Statics
- Let (wm)/e / µ the cost of a unit effort
- dµ/dZ gt 0 and
- dp/dZ lt 0
- What is the economic meaning of these results?
9General Equilibrium
- The zero profit condition p - d 0
- ? varies with the level of aggregate employment
(nhH), so - ? ?(H, ...) with ?gt 0
- Z Z(H, ..) with Z gt 0
- Recall that (wm)/e / µ the cost of a unit
effort and dµ/dZ gt 0 and dp/dZ lt 0 - Because these relationships are all monotonic,
there is a unique µ0 and hence a unique Z0 and H0
that satisfies the zpc. - Thus the level of unemployment, employment,
number of firms are determined. Why is Hlt1? - No reference to aggregate demand?
10e, wis Pareto-inefficient. Why? How to show
this?
- Ve 0 but pe gt 0 and
- Vw gt 0 but pw 0
- thus there exists some (arbitrarily small) values
(?e,?w) such that - V(e?e,w?w)gtV(e,w) and
- p(e?e,w?w,...)gtp(e,w)
- Where is the efficient contract locus in the
figure?
11Why is w, m technically inefficient?
In what sense is m unproductive labor?
12Pareto sub-optimal workplace amenities
- Suppose the employee's utility function is
expanded to include a measure of work amenities
provided (per hour of work), t - u(w,t,e)
- with ut gt 0 over the relevant range, and that
amenities cost pt for the employer to provide. - a new present value V(e,w,t)
- a new best response function e(w,m,tz)
- an additional first order condition for the
employer - pt y'et - pt 0
- Q Why will t be P-suboptimal?
- A for the same reason that the wage suboptimal
more amenities and more effort are a pareto
improvement
13Can trade union bargaining implement a
P-improvement over w,e?
The Employers and Unions Bargaining Problem
Per Period Payoffs (right figure) Note the
bargaining set is the area bounded by the payoffs
in the non cooperative interaction and the
efficient contract locus. If the strategies
available were unconditional w and w for the
employer and e and e for the employee, the game
is a prisoners dilemma. Point a is the
equilibrium of the uncooperative game (indicated
by point a in the left figure) while point b is a
point on the efficient contract locus (indicated
by point b in figure 1).
14Given that job rents are huge, firms could sell
jobs. What problem would the firm solve to
calculate the optimal fee?
- Let B a one time job fee.
- The employer varies h, w, and B to maximize
p y(he(w)) -hw iBh - subject to V(e(w), w-iB) Z
- where i is the rate of return and V(.) is the
ex ante present value of the job with fee B. - w-iB is the net wage taking account of the
opportunity cost to the employee of foregoing
returns iB on the employees wealth.
15- Results
- P-efficient?
- Labor market clearing?
- P has power over A?
Optimal job fees. The employer identifies point a
as the solution of max e/(mw-iB), the effort
elicited from the employee per unit cost. The
employer then offers w (the employee responds
with e) with a fee of B.
16Why do firms not sell jobs (charge an optimal
fee)? Some possible answers
- Firms search costs are reduced by job rationing
- Morale, reciprocity reasons
- Perhaps they do (by very low initial wages, etc)
17Macroeconomic applications
- w(h) the labor market equilibrium (workers and
firms foc with respect to labor discipline) h is
total employment - h(w) the locus of w,h s.t. excess demand for
goods i b s 0 - Upward shift in w(h) increases h saving
depends strongly on profit share
Bowles, Samuel and Robert Boyer. 1988. "Labor
Discipline and Aggregate Demand A Macroeconomic
Model." American Economic Review, 782, pp.
395-400.
18Two ways of closing the model zpc or aggregate
demand
- h (w) could be the h for a given w that
satisfies zpc (necessarily downwards sloping) or - the level of employment that clears the product
market.
19Evidence
- Labor effort appears to be quite variable and is
rarely subject to contract (Laffont, Lazear,
Rosenzweig et al) - Employers devote substantial personnel (Gordon)
and other resources (Baker) to monitoring their
employees effort. - Substantial employment rents in most jobs (
primary /secondary labor market distinction)
(Weisskopf and Green) - Real wages tend to vary with the level of
employment (Blanchflower and Oswald, Bowles,
BER) - Econometric evidence on effort (Schor), labor
productivity (BGW), and profits (BGW) (high
employment profit squeeze) - Experimental evidence (Fehr et al)
- Footnote how BGW came to do this work.
20Presentations of discussion questions (with .ppt
or handouts)
- Apartheid as labor discipline (22.3)
- The distribution of gains from freer North South
trade (22.2) - An employment subsidy with endogenous effort (23)
- An incentive compatible BIG (unconditional basic
income grant) (24) - Husbands and wives/Principals and agents (29)
A more extensive review of the evidence, if youd
like Next credit and wealth, read chapter 9.
21Additional readings
- Bowles, Samuel, Herbert Gintis, and Melissa
Osborne. 2001. "Incentive-Enhancing Preferences."
American Economic Review, 912, pp. 155-58 - Heckman, James and Yona Rubinstein. 2001. "The
importance of non-cognitive skills lessons from
the GED testing progam." American Economic
Review, 912, pp. 145-49 - Bowles, Samuel, Herbert Gintis, and Melissa
Osborne. 2001. "The Determinants of Earnings A
Behavioral Approach." Journal of Economic
Literature, XXXIX(December), pp. 1137-76.
22- After NAFTA. A country (South) with a large
traditional grain growing sector protected by
tariffs and subsidies shares a border with a
country (North) with ideal grain growing
conditions and a highly productive agricultural
sector. The reservation position for wage workers
in the South is to return to working on their
family's farm in the traditional agricultural
sector. An international trade economist proposes
a free trade area for the two countries, removing
tariffs and subsidies, showing that substantial
gains from trade will result for both countries,
and claiming that employees in the South will
enjoy higher (real) wages as a result. A worker
asks you if the claim is correct. The trade
economist is certainly right about the gains from
trade but what about the wage increases? Show
that i) using the no shirking condition as the
model of wage determination, the trade economist
is wrong and ii) assuming that wages and effort
are determined by a Nash bargain between
employees and employers he could be right, but
need not be.
23- The apartheid system in South Africa gave
non-white workers restricted access to the labor
market of the modern sector of the economy.
According to the infamous pass laws, those
working in the urban areas required a pass, which
was revoked if their job was terminated, and they
were required to return to close to subsistence
living in one of the so- called bantustans. South
African scholars have debated whether this system
lowered profits (by restricting the supply of
labor) or raised profits (by providing businesses
with a favorable labor discipline environment).
Use the labor discipline model (the no shirking
condition, or the more general model in the text)
to develop the latter argument. What additional
information would you need to determine which
position is more nearly correct?
24- A wage subsidy. Employment subsidies are a
widely discussed means of increasing employment
in labor surplus economies, or among less skilled
workers in the advanced countries. Suppose that n
identical firms each hire h hours of identical
labor, varying both h and w, the hourly wage, to
maximize profits, which depend on total labor
effor which is the product of hours hired and
effort per hour, e. Consider two types of subsidy
paid to owners of each firm i) an employment
subsidy the subsidy s is a fixed amount, paid
per hour of labor hired, or ii) a wage subsidy,
F, the subsidy is a fixed fraction of the wages
paid. You may assume that the taxes supporting
this subsidy have no effects on this problem.
Using the zero subsidy case as a benchmark,
indicate the effects of the two types of subsidy
on the equilibrium wage, effort, and employment
levels, assuming a) that z, the fallback position
of each worker, is exogenous, and b) that z
varies with the level of total employment, nh
25- The BIG idea. (8) Assume all employed work for
an hour. A linear tax (meaning with a flat rate,
J) is levied on every employed worker, the
proceeds being distributed unconditionally to all
members of the population (for simplicity, assume
that half of those in the population are
employed, a quarter are unemployed and a quarter
are not in the labor force). Because profits are
not taxed and because all workers (including
those not working) are identical, we assume this
proposal has no effect on the demand for labor so
the expected duration of a spell of unemployment
is unaffected. You may also abstract from any
changes in labor supply. Assume that the
implementation of the BIG is accompanied by the
elimination of unemployment insurance (define
this as b), the replacement income a worker
receives if unemployed) and that the net effect
of the tax, the BIG, and the elimination of
unemployment insurance on the government budget
is zero. If the employment relationship is
governed by the contingent renewal model in the
text, with ww, ee with b w/2 what is the
maximum tax that can be levied without reducing
the equilibrium level of effort and what is the
resulting per person grant? Check to see that a
family composed of two employed workers, one
unemployed person and one out of the labor force,
experiences no change in income or total effort
provided, while those with relatively more
non-employed members gain.
26- Domestic labor. (10) Consider the determination
of domestic work and the sharing of income by a
husband and wife (the amount of domestic work
done is not costlessly observable by the other
adult, as much of it is bestowed on the children,
and the results of this are only evident in the
very long run). Consider only the two adults, one
of whom works for pay and other works in their
home. Extend the model in chapter 8 to determine
the share of the paid worker's income received by
the home worker (w) and the amount of domestic
work done (e). Contrast this domestic labor
discipline model with a transactions cost
approach to this problem. What are the relevant
transaction specific investments? What are the
similarities and key differences?