Title: Economics 324: Labor Economics
1Economics 324 Labor Economics
- 0. Welcome!
- 1. Go over class webpage (syllabus, requirements,
etc.) - Powerpoint slides not a substitute
- 2. For next time, read
- Borjas Ch. 1 (including Appendix), Ch. 2.1 -
2.6 -
2What is Economics?
- Economics is the study of mankind in the
ordinary business of life. -- Alfred Marshall
(1890) - The study of how scarce resources are allocated
among competing ends (how do people make choices
when there is scarcity?) - Macro deals with aggregates GDP, inflation,
unemployment, exports, imports, government/public
expenditures, etc. - Micro deals with behavior of "small" units
consumers, workers, firms, one industry, etc. - Labor market is a unique market
3What is Labor Economics?
- The study of the behavior of employers and
employees in response to the general incentives
of wages, prices, profit, non- pecuniary
aspects of working (e.g., working conditions) - Big picture questions in Labor econ
- Why are people unemployed? Is it good?
- Why have hours worked in Japan fallen from 2,184
to 1,919 since 1973? - Why do women earn 76 cents for every dollar men
do? - Is a talented HS student better off going to
Yale, Davidson, or Rutgers? - Should we care that CEOs make 300 times the
average wage? - Should I go to graduate school now or later? At
all? - Do pretty people earn more?
- Does health insurance hinder job mobility?
Should we care? - Is immigration good?
- Should the GED be scrapped?
- How have computers changed the wage distribution?
4U.S. Economy at a Glance
- Current state of U.S. labor market is
http//www.bls.gov/eag/eag.us.htm - How does North Carolina stack up?
- North Carolinas Economy at a Glance
- Industry at a Glance
- Distribution of employment
- http//www.bls.gov/iag/iaghome.htm
5Positive vs. Normative Analysis
- Role of the labor market is to facilitate
voluntary, mutually beneficial transactions (if
all those take place ? Pareto efficiency) - Governments role
- Positive analysis
- What is it?
- What does it assume?
- Normative analysis
- What is it?
- Mutually beneficial transactions (mkt) vs.
Redistributional transactions (govt) - Employers offering pensions will pay lower wages
than they would if they did not offer a pension
plan. - Employers should not be required to offer
pensions to workers.
6Market Failures
- Labor market facilitates voluntary, mutually
beneficial transactions. When does the market
fail and we dont see Pareto-improving
transactions? - Ignorance smoker in asbestos plant dont know
of job opening - Transaction barriers law restricting women
to lt 40 hours law requiring a 50 OT
premium simple cost as a barrier to
moving - Price distortions taxes subsidies can create
incorrect prices plumber charging
15/hr. with 5 tax - Missing market impossible or not customary to
transact (e.g., living in the apt.
below a really bad band) - Solution is often Government Intervention
7Government Intervention
- Repeal certain laws
- Public goods
- Some union workers are worried about noise from
machinery - A sawmill factory wants to finance the research
sell its findings - Problem?
- Capital market imperfections
- Students/workers are worried about getting loans
for college/job training or some workers would
like to move to new city - Government could make loans to help strengthen
the economy - Markets are missing
- Resident is worried about the band noise from
upstairs - Government could intervene and pass law on noise
levels - Concerns?
8Overview of the Labor Market
- Disputes over efficiency vs. equity
- Buyers are employers, sellers are workers
- Size of the market national, regional, local
- Formal vs. Informal rules and procedures
- Internal labor markets union firms, govt, large
non-union firms - Smaller, non-union companies have less formal
guidelines - Note that people can be in more than one labor
market they are not mutually exclusive
9Definitions
- Employed person working for pay (135 m in 2000)
BLS link - Unemployed person not working for pay, but
actively seeking a job or expecting to be
recalled from a layoff (6 m) - OLF not employed and not unemployed (69 m)
- Labor Force those ? 16 who are employed or
unemployed - Flows
- OLF ? LF ? LF ? OLF ?
- E ? U ? U ? E ?
- Labor Force Participation Rate LF / (Population
? 16)
10Labor Force Participation
- Labor force participation is on the rise overall
- LFP rates for men are falling, while those
for women are rising dramatically. - Avg hours worked per week have also fallen
substantially.
11Unemployment Rate
- Unemployment rate U/LF
- If u-rate ? 5, we call the overall labor market
tight hard for employers to fill jobs if
u-rate ? 7 is loose - Loose during Great Depression Tight during WWII
- Trends average u-rate has ? (non-war,
non-GD years) - the variance has ?
- Conclusion Labor market is more stable now, but
at higher level of unemp
12Distribution of Employment
- Major patterns?
- Agricultural employment has declined
dramatically, while services has expanded - Size of government has nearly quadrupled
- Workers and firms adapted, and must continue to
adapt (demographic) - These are snapshots and ?miss job transitions
that occur between time points. 1972-86, 11 of
manuf jobs destroyed annually, 9 created? 2 net
loss
13Earnings and Income
- Wage rate price of labor per hour
- Money youd lose per hour if you had an
unauthorized absence. So a sick day becomes an
employee benefit. - e.g., if paid 100 total comp. for 25 hours 20
spent working, 5 vacation - then well call the wage 4/hour. Not 5/hour.
80 wages, 20 benefit. - Structure of Compensation
- Wage rate hours worked Earnings
- Earnings Employee benefits Total Compensation
- 70 of Total Compensation is from earnings, on
average - Total Compensation Unearned income Income
- Nominal vs. Real wages
- Nominal wage wage in current dollars
- Real wage nominal wage / some measure of prices
- it is used to indicate a level of purchasing
power, so we can compare across time - earn 100/day and book costs 50, real wage 2
books per day
14Real wages of U.S. workers(non-supervisory
workers in private sector)
- What happened to real wages from 1980 to 2003?
- Nominal Real wages 1980 1990 2003
- Avg hourly earnings 6.84 10.19 15.38
- CPI (base 1982-84 100) 82.4 130.7 184.0
- Avg hourly earnings 8.30 7.80 8.36 in
1982-84 dollars - Avg hourly earnings 15.27 14.35 15.38 in
2003 dollars - Nominal wages rising, but prices of good/services
also rising, - ? need to deflate by CPI (fixed bundle of food,
housing, clothing, etc.) - Set cost of our bundle in the base period
(1982-1984) 100. 1 in 2003 appears to buy
less than one-third what a 1980 1 did. - Conclusion Real wages were stagnant from 1980 to
2003. - Problems with using a fixed bundle?
15Economics 324 Labor Economics
- Any questions?
- For next time, read Rizzo Blumenthal rest of
Chapter 2. - Presenter for Rizzo Blumenthal?
- Motivation
- Literature review (whats new in their paper)
- Theory/Conceptual framework
- Empirical specification
- Results
- Implications
- Problem presenters for 2.7 and 2.8?
-
16Labor Supply Theory and Evidence
In order that people may be happy in their work,
they must not do too much of it. Herman
Melville
- Model of labor-leisure choice
- Goal is to identify factors that determine
whether a person works and, if so, how much she
works - Representative individual has utility function, U
f (C, L) - C is composite consumption good, L is leisure
hours - Utility function transforms consumption of goods
leisure into an index measuring the level of
satisfaction ? - We assume that more is better
- We assume the person endeavors to maximize
utility - Indifference curve is the locus of points (C,L)
that yield the same level of utility
17Properties of Indifference Curves
- ICs are downward-sloping
- Higher IC indicates higher utility
- ICs do not intersect
- ICs are convex to the origin
- Marginal utility of consumption the change in
utility resulting from an additional 1 spent on
goods, holding leisure constant - Marginal utility of leisure the
change in utility resulting from consuming an
additional hour of leisure, holding consumption
constant
C
U 750
U 500
Leisure (hours)
U XY U 10X ½Y ½ MUX and MUY?
18Slope of an Indifference Curve
- Slope measures the rate at which a person is
willing to give up leisure time for more
consumption, holding U constant - Total derivative of U U(C,L) is
-
- Solve for dC/dL
- In words, the absolute value of the slope of an
IC is the ratio of the marginal utilities, and we
call this the Marginal Rate of Substitution - Slope is steep when lots of C, little L, but
flatter when little C lots of L
19Time and Budget Constraints
- Time constraint T L h
- Ignoring household sector for now
- V non-labor income
- w hourly wage rate
- Budget constraint is the boundary of the workers
opportunity set. - C ? wh V cant consume more than your
income - Assume w constant, but note that marginal wage
rate (wage received for last hour worked) can
depend on hours worked (OT premium is higher,
part-time wage often lower)
C
(wTV)
E
V
Leisure (hours)
T
0
20Time and Budget Constraints
- Combine the budget and time constraints to get
- wT V C wL
- This says that full income (potential income if
worked T hours) is spent on consumption and
leisure - Rewrite so its easier to graph
- C (wT V) - wL
- Point E is the endowment point. This person
can consume V of goods services even if they
use all their time for leisure.
21To Work or Not to Work?
- Reservation wage is the wage at which a worker is
indifferent between working and not working. - In other words, it is the minimum increase in
income that makes a worker indifferent between
remaining at point E and working that first hour. - A person will work if the market wage gt
reservation wage - Predictions
- a higher reservation wage makes a person less
likely to enter LF - the higher your market wage, the more likely you
are to work (ceteris paribus, for given tastes
and V) - This positive correlation between offered wages
and LFP rates helps explain the dramatic increase
in female LFP - What if you commute 30 minutes from Statesville?
(time costs) - How do monetary commuting costs affect the
reservation wage?
22Commuting Costs and Reservation Wage
- How do monetary commuting costs affect the
reservation wage? - Start with V non-labor income
- best utility level is U0
- Monetary commuting costs would be parking, tolls,
car insurance, maintenance, gas, etc. - Slope of line aE1 is the reservation wage in the
presence of commuting costs - Its greater than WRES without commuting costs
- Conclusion Commuting costs increase the
reservation wage
C
(wTV)
a
E0
V
U0
V - Costs
E1
L
T
0
23Optimal Labor-Leisure Choice example
- Suppose Jacks utility function is given by U
L? C? - Find the demand function for leisure hours, L
L (w, V, T) - Assuming ? ¾, ? ¼, V 0, T 400 and w
4 what are the initial optimal values? - Now suppose welfare program passed giving 200 of
income if you dont work at all. As you earn
income benefits are scaled back 0.20 per dollar
earned. - What is the break-even point and what are the
effects on labor supply? - Decompose, graphically and numerically, the
change in demand due to the subsidy and tax into
the substitution and income effects. - What if U L¼ C¾ ?
h L C U
Initial
subsidy
Tax SE
Tax IE