labour markets Flashcards
Relationship between wage rate and labour demand
- There is an inverse relationship between demand for labour and the wage rate.
- If the wage rate is high - more cost to hire extra employees.
- When wages are lower, labour becomes relatively cheaper than capital. A fall in the wage rate might create a substitution effect and lead to an expansion in labour demand.
Elasticity of labour demand
- When labour demand is elastic, employment is sensitive to changing wages and vice versa when inelastic.
- Elasticity of labour demand measures the responsiveness of demand when there is a change in the wage rate. It depends on:
Labour costs as a % of total costs - when labour expenses are a high % of total costs, then labour demand is more elastic.
Ease and costs of factor substitution - Labour demand is more elastic when a firm can substitute easily between labour and capital inputs.
Factors affecting labour demand
- A rise in consumer demand which means that a business needs to take on more workers
- An increase in the productivity of labour which makes labour more cost effective than capital.
- A government employment subsidy which allows a business to employ more workers.
- Level of government regulation of the labour market
- Increase in wages reduces labour demand
- The labour demand curve would shift inwards during a recession as businesses shed labour.
Labour supply
- The number of hours people are willing and able to supply at a given wage rate.
- The labour supply curve for any industry or occupation will be upward sloping
- As wages rise, other workers enter this industry attracted by the incentive of higher rewards.
- The extent to which a rise in the prevailing wage or salary in an occupation leads to an expansion in the supply of labour depends on the elasticity of labour supply.
Labour supply diagram
- The supply of labour curve starts from a certain point on the y axis, which is the minimum pay rate people are willing to work in an occupation.
Key factors affecting labour supply
- Real wage rate on offer in the industry itself
- Extra pay e.g. overtime payments and productivity pay
- Wages in substitute occupations e.g. increase in plumbers or electricians earnings may cause people to switch jobs.
- Barriers to entry e.g. minimum entry requirements can restrict supply and increase wages.
- Improvements in the occupational mobility of labour
- Fringe benefits (non monetary characteristics) e.g. risk, job security, working conditions, promotion opportunities.
- Net migration of labour, net inward migration boosts the available labour supply.
Elasticity of labour supply
- Elasticity of labour supply measures the extent to which labour supply responds to a change in the wage rate in a given time period
draw diagram
Equilibrium market wage rate
- The equilibrium market wage rate is at the intersection of the supply and demand for labour. Employees are hired up to the point where the extra cost of hiring an employee is equal to the extra sales revenue from selling their output.
Reasons for pay differentials in the labour market
Compensating wage differentials - reward for risk, working in poor conditions etc.
Reward for human capital - differentials compensate workers for costs of human capital acquisition.
Different skill levels - demand for skilled labour grows more quickly than for semi-skilled workers.
Differences in labour productivity and revenue creation - higher pay for more efficient workers who generate more revenue.
Trade unions - use power to achieve increased wages
Other artificial barriers to labour supply - e.g. profess. exams
Employer discrimination - a factor that cannot be ignored
Trade unions in the labour market
- Use collective bargaining power with employers to protect their members.
Key roles for trade unions
- Protecting and improving the real living standards of their members.
- Protecting workers against unfair dismissal.
- Promoting improvements in working conditions and health and safety issues.
- Workplace training and education.
- Protection of union member’s pension rights.
Key causes of labour market failure
- Markets fail when they fail to reach a socially efficient/equitable outcome.
Labour immobility - occupational and geographical immobility.
Disincentives to find/take work - Unemployment trap where there’s poor incentives to take a job, and poverty trap where there’s disincentives to earn extra incomes
Discrimination by employers - Gender pay gap between men and women, affected group’s wages are badly affected.
Monopsony power of employers - They can use their ‘buying power’ in labour market to drive down wages.
Government policies to address labour market failure
- Policies seek to improve incentives, skills and labour flexibility, such as:
- Targeted employment subsidies
- Reforms to the housing market to improve affordability.
- Lower income tax
- Increase national minimum wage
- Tougher laws on equality
- Laws on unfair dismissal
- Encourage business start ups
Aim of competition policy
- To ensure that any action that ‘prevents, restricts or distorts competition’ is blocked and that fair trading is enforced.
Government intervention to control mergers
- If a merger leads to a ‘substantial lessening of competition’, it is likely to be blocked.
- The competition and markets authority determines whether a merger will impact adversely on competition.