3.6.1 - The Demand for Labour Flashcards
What is a factor market?
A market in which factors of production are bought and sold.
What type of market is the labour market?
A factor market.
What are the factor markets?
Markets for:
Land
Labour
Capital
Enterprise
Who supplies the labour in the labour market?
Households.
Who demands the labour in the labour market?
Businesses.
How do factor markets differ from goods markets?
The firms demand the factors and households / other businesses supply them.
Why is the labour market important to the goods market?
The labour creates goods that businesses sell.
The labour is paid for their services meaning they can purchase goods from other businesses.
What do households require to exercise demand?
An ability to pay for the good. (income)
A willingness to pay for the good.
How do most households make income?
Selling their labour services in a labour market.
How can you draw the relationship between households and firms?
In a circular manner.
What is derived demand?
Demand for a good / factor of production, not wanted for its own sake, but as a consequence of the demand of something else.
Why do firms demand labour?
They produce goods which increases their profits.
What is a requirement for long run employment of labour?
Assuming firms are profit maximising, the outputs produced must be sold for at least a normal profit in the goods market.
What is the marginal physical product of labour?
The addition to a firm’s total output brought about by employing one more worker.
What is a synonym of marginal physical product of labour?
Marginal returns of labour.
What does MPPL measure?
The amount by which a firm’s total output rises in the short run (holding capital fixed) as a result of employing one more worker.
What does this graph show?
The laws of diminishing marginal returns of labour when capital is fixed.
What could be said about this graph?
The MPPL is always decreasing whenever one more employee is hired.
This contrasts with other theories that marginal returns are a parabola that increase before decreasing.
It could be argued that this graph is even further simplified over a parabolic marginal returns graph that more closely resembles the real world.
What is the marginal revenue product of labour?
The monetary value of the addition to a firm’s total output brought about by employing one more worker.
How can you convert a marginal physical product graph to a marginal revenue product graph?
Multiply the marginal physical product by the MR of the good.
If the MPPL of a worker is 5, and the MR is £25, what is the MRPL of the worker?
£125.
In a perfectly competitive market, what can be said about the MR of a good relative to its price?
They are equal and horizontal.
What are the equations for MRPL?
MPPL * MR = MRPL
(under perfect competition) MRPL = MPPL * price
What happens to the MRPL a good is sold in an imperfectly competitive goods market rather than a perfectly competitive goods market?
The MRPL will decrease much faster as the MR from selling an extra worker’s output also falls as output increases.
Along with this, firms have a downward sloping demand curve and therefore has to reduce the price of the product in order to sell the extra output.