Finance 101: Monetary Economics &
the Global Economy
Lecture 5
The labor market
Prof. Taschereau-Dumouchel
Spring 2013
Outline
Labor demand (by firms)
Labor supply (by people)
Labor market equilibrium
Why do the French work less?
Readings and Problems
Readings
ABC, chapters 3.2 3.4
Practice problems
ABC chapter 3
Review questions 6, 7, 9
Numerical questions 3, 5, 6
Analytical questions 2, 4, 5
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Factor Demands by Firms
Firms produce and sell goods
Why?
To maximize profits
How?
By choosing how much inputs to use (labor,
capital)
Taking their current technology as given
Labor demand
Assume
Capital stock is fixed in the short run (we will relax that later)
Capital takes time to adjust
Focus on demand for labor
Workers are identical
Perfect competition on product and labor market
Firms have no control over prices and wages
Firms maximize profits
Notation
Notations :
P = price level of the unique good
Y = real GDP
W = nominal wage (in $)
w = W/P = real wage
UC = nominal user cost of capital, or rental price of capital
uc = UC/P = real user cost of capital
Labor Demand by Firms
Firms maximize profits
In nominal terms:
Profits = Revenue
Costs
= P . Y (W.N + UC.K )
P.Y = total sales revenue (in $)
W.N = total wage bill (in $)
UC.K = income accruing to capital holder (in $)
Labor Demand by Firms
Maximization problem :
Given a stock of capital K, choose N to maximize profits.
Represent firms problem by the following mathematical
problem:
max N P.Y W.N UC.K
subject to Y = AF( K , N )
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Solving Firms Problem
max N P.Y W.N UC.K
(Objective)
subject to Y = AF( K , N )
(Constraint)
This is a constrained maximization problem :
How should we deal with the constraint ?
Simply by substituting in the objective function :
max N P.AF ( K , N )W.N UC.K
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Solving the Firms Problem
Holding P, W, UC, A and K fixed, we solve for the optimal labor
N:
Derive the first order condition (FOC) :
With Cobb-Douglas: (1-a)AKaN-a = (1-a)Y/N = W/P = w
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Intuition
P.AF(K,N)
P.AF(K,N)-W.N
W.N
N
N*
N*
Intuition for the result:
With fewer workers, MPN > W/P, so much more gains to makes .
The revenue from an extra worker exceeds the cost, so hire more.
Hire more until at some point MPN = W/P
If hire too much, MPN < W/P, so start making losses!
The revenue from extra workers less than the cost so lay them off.
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Effect of an Increase in the Wage
W2.N
P.AF(K,N)
W1.N
N
N2
N1
If the real wage W/P increases:
The slope of the cost function becomes steeper
Diminishing returns: N must decrease so that MPN=W/P
Conclusion : Labor demand N is a decreasing function of W/P
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Demand for Labor
W/P
Nd
Aggregate labor demand Nd is sum of firms individual demand.
As the real wage increases, labor demand by firms decreases
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Effect of an increase in A
P.A2F(K,N)
P.A1F(K,N)
W.N
N
N1
N2
If A increases from A1 to A2 (A1 < A2) :
Each worker produces more for a given wage, so firms are more willing
to hire them
The demand for labor increases
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Effect of an increase in A
W/P
Nd
If A increases from A1 to A2 (A1 < A2) :
The labor demand shifts to the right
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Cobb-Douglas Example
Assume : Y = A K 0.3 N 0.7
A 0.7 K
d
N (w)=(
0.3
0.71
w
)
0.3
0.7 A K
=W / P=w
1
0.3
=(
0.7 A K
w
0.3
1
0.3
N decreases with the real wage w
N increases with A and K :
More capital per worker implies that workers are more productive.
Firms are more willing to hire them (given a fixed wage)
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Labor supply
The supply of labor is determined by individuals
Aggregate supply is the sum of individuals labor supply.
Individuals labor supply depends on labor-leisure choice
Two simultaneous effects :
Substitution effect (SE) : Higher real wage encourages work, since
reward for working is higher (opportunity cost of leisure is higher)
Income effect (IE) : Higher real wage increases income for same amount
of work time, so person can afford more leisure, so will supply less labor.
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Theoretical Analysis
Effect of an increase in the real wage
Note : the price (opportunity cost) of leisure is the real wage
2 simultaneous effects :
Substitution effect : leisure is now more expensive
consume less leisure
work more
Labor supply increases
Income effect : individuals feel wealthier
consume more leisure
work less
Labor supply decreases
The theory alone does not tell us which effect dominates. It all
depends on peoples preferences look in the data!
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Substitution vs Income Effects
Substitution > Income
Real wage, w
Substitution = Income
Real wage, w
NS
Real wage, w
NS
NS
Labor,N
Substitution < Income
Labor,N
Labor,N
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Factors that Affect Labor Supply
Wealth
Greater wealth reduces labor supply (income effect)
Expected increase in future real wage
Like an increase in wealth so reduces labor supply
The longer the high wage is expected to last the larger is the income
effect
Working age population and labor force participation rate
Both increase labor supply
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Empirical Evidence
Suppose the real wage increase :
For a temporary increase in real wages, labor supply increases
Substitution effect dominates.
For a permanent increase in real wages, labor supply decreases
Income effect dominates
Business cycles, we usually assume that substitution dominates :
Real wage, w
NS
Labor,N
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Labor Market Equilibrium
We have modeled both sides of the labor market :
Demand (firms) : Nd(W/P)
Supply (workers) : Ns(W/P)
How does the labor market reach an equilibrium?
In particular, how are wages determined?
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Labor Market Equilibrium
Real wage, W/P
NS
w*
ND
N*
Labor,N
Equilibrium : Nd(W/P) = Ns(W/P)
The real wage is such that supply equals demand
At N*, the economy is at full employment
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Labor market equilibrium
Notice that there is no unemployment
Not realistic (see later how to deal with it)
In particular, need to assume that wages are flexible :
Unemployed workers willing to accept wage cuts in order
to find job. This prevent the existence of unemployment.
In reality : wages seem rigid and take time to adjust.
This equilibrium concept describes labor markets in the long-run
When wages and prices have fully adjusted.
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There is never unemployment in
classical labor market equilibrium
Assumptions
(1)All jobs and workers are the same
(2)There is perfect information
(3)Real wages adjust instantaneously
FNCE 101 - Kurmann - Lecture 6
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Full Employment
Full-employment Output = Potential Output
We wait for the wage to adjust fully
Potential output = level of output when labor market is in equilibrium
Potential output Y * AF(K, N* )
Potential output can be affected by changes in full employment level,
productivity and other kinds of supply shocks
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Full employment output
Y
AF(K,N)
N
w
NS
ND
N
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Application 1: Oil shocks
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Effect of a (temporary) oil shock
Y
AF(K,N)
N
w
NS
ND
N
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Effect of oil shock
Oil shocks
Sharp oil price increases in 19731974, 19791980, 20032005
Effects
Adverse supply (or TFP) shocklowers labor demand, employment, the
real wage, and the full-employment level of output
First two episodes: U.S. economy entered recessions and real wage fell
Last episode: U.S. economy didnt enter recession and real wages didnt
fall
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Why do the French work less?
In 2004, French GDP/capita was about 30% below U.S.
GDP/capita, mostly because the French worked much less (both
less employment and less hours worked per employee).
Do the French have a bigger preference for leisure than
Americans?
Or are there are other possible explanations?
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Taxes and employment
Real wage w
NS
(without taxes)
ND
(without taxes)
Labor N
Taxes and employment
NS
(with labor income taxes)
Real wage w
NS
(without taxes)
ND
(without taxes)
Labor N
Taxes and employment
NS
(with labor income taxes
and consumption taxes)
Real wage w
NS
(without taxes)
ND
(without taxes)
Labor N
Taxes and employment
NS
(with labor income taxes
and consumption taxes)
Real wage w
NS
(without taxes)
w*
ND
(with taxes on
firm revenue or
firms capital)
ND
(without taxes)
Labor N
N*
Taxes and employment
Prescott (2002)
Summary
Labor demand (ND): amount of labor that firms are willing to hire for a
given wage (derived from profit maximization)
Labor supply (NS): amount of labor that individuals are willing to supply
for a given wage (derived from utility maximization)
Classical labor market equilibrium: wage for which ND = NS
Presumes that wages adjust quickly
Describes full employment situation
Problems with classical model
Cant study unemployment
Maybe wages dont adjust that quickly
Differences in tax rates can explain why French work less than Americans
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Reading for next lecture
ABC Chapter 3.5, 11.1
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