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Input Markets and Determining Returns to Factors of Production

This chapter explores how input markets determine the returns to each factor of production, including labor and capital. It examines the concepts of marginal physical product, marginal revenue product, and market demand and supply for labor. The chapter also discusses the conflict over surplus between workers and owners of land and capital.

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Input Markets and Determining Returns to Factors of Production

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  1. Chapter 26 Input Markets and the Origins of Class Conflict

  2. Return on Each Factor of Production • Production requires the input of • Workers • Capitalists • Landowners • They contribute their inputs in return of a payment • Concerns about fair /reasonable returns • Objective: • Understand how the return to each factor is determined by modeling the input markets? • How does market power affect the return to each?

  3. The Return on Labor • Labor market • Firms – demand labor • Individuals – supply labor • Demand for labor • Derived demand • From profit maximization

  4. Deriving the marginal physical product of labor Output (Q) d Q=f(L, K) a 20 c ΔQ Marginal Physical Product curve Total product curve b ΔQ When L’ units of labor are used, the marginal physical product of labor is 5 units of output, as we see from the slope of the total product curve between points a and b. 15 Marginal Physical Product of Labor ΔQ ΔL 10 ΔL 5 C A B ΔL 3 2 L’ L’+1 L’+2 L’+3 Labor (L) Labor (L) Plotting the marginal physical product of labor on the vertical axis yields a marginal physical product curve. 0 0 L’ L’+1 L’+2 L’+3

  5. The Return on Labor • Marginal physical product (MPP) curve • Additional output produced from additional units of labor

  6. How many workers to hire? • The firm will consider the marginal benefit and the marginal cost of hiring additional workers • The marginal benefit side: the benefit from hiring an additional workers is the revenue that this worker generates. We refer to this benefit as the marginal revenue product (MRP) • The marginal cost side: the cost of hiring an additional worker • For a perfectly competitive labor market the cost of hiring an additional labor is the wage • The firm will hire workers up to the point where marginal benefit =marginal cost

  7. How many workers to hire? • Marginal revenue product (MRP) • MRP == • MRP = (MR)(MPP) • MR will depend on the goods market: • If perfect competitive goods market then MR=P • If not then MR<P

  8. Output (Q) A firm’s decision about hiring labor A profit-maximizing firm will hire units of labor up to the point at which the marginal revenue product curve intersects the marginal cost of labor curve Marginal Cost of Labor MRP of Competitive Firm 0 Labor (L) L*

  9. Labor demand curve • A firm’s labor demand: • Relation between w and workers hired • Is the firm’s MRP

  10. Output (Q) MRP: monopoly vs PC goods market The marginal revenue product of a monopolist falls faster than that of a perfectly competitive market because the monopolist’s marginal revenue is always less than the price. MRP of PC market MRP of Monopolist 0 Labor (L)

  11. Output (Q) A firm’s decision about hiring labor MRP of Monopolist Marginal Cost of Labor More workers are hired if the goods market is PC b a MRP of PC market 0 Labor (L) Lb La

  12. Market demand for labor • Market demand for labor • Horizontal sum of individual demands for labor

  13. Deriving the market demand for labor Wage Wage Wage Wage D wb wb wb wb wa wa wa wa D D D 8 10 7 20 10 15 25 45 0 0 0 0 Labor Labor Labor Labor Firm 1 Firm 2 Firm 3 Market The market demand for labor is the horizontal sum of the individual labor demand (marginal revenue product) curves of all the firms in the market

  14. Labor Supply • Individual workers • Work • Leisure • Maximize utility • Individual labor supply • Amount of labor • Worker – willing and able • Various wage rates

  15. Wage The labor supply curve for an individual worker h f e Plotting the number of hours of labor supplied on the horizontal axis and the wage rate on the vertical axis yields the labor supply curve for an individual worker. wh wf we 0 Hours of Labor Le Lf Lh

  16. The Return on Labor • Market supply for labor • Horizontal sum of individual workers supply curves • Equilibrium market wage • Market supply = Market demand • Wage • All workers in industry

  17. Wage Determining the equilibrium market wage S The equilibrium market wage is the wage at which the market demand for labor equals the market supply of labor. we E 0 D Labor Le

  18. Setting the Stage for Class Conflict • Market: we • Each firm – hires labor • Total wage • = marginal revenue product • Surplus • Conflict – surplus • Workers • Land owners • Capital owners

  19. Wage The conflict over the surplus in a firm With an equilibrium wage rate of we, the worker receives a payment equal to the area weeLe0, whereas the firm receives a surplus equal to the area Hewe. H we e 0 Labor MRP Le

  20. The Return on Capital • Capital • Human artifact • Goods - made by human beings • Used - produce outputs • Human capital • Skills of labor

  21. The Return on Capital • Build capital • Borrow money – interest • Use own money – opportunity cost • Expected return to capital • Financial markets • Suppliers (loanable funds) • Demanders (firms) • Market interest rate

  22. The Return on Capital • Supply of loanable funds • Consumers – save • Earn interest • Sacrifice present consumption • Budget line • Slope – interest rate • Consumer preferences - indifference curve • Consumption today • Consumption tomorrow

  23. Consumption Tomorrow Figure 26.10 E • The decision to save B The consumer allocates her income between current consumption and saving such that the budget line, whose slope represents the rate of interest, is tangent to an indifference curve reflecting her preferences between consumption today and consumption tomorrow $11,000 $5,500 Consumption Savings 0 Consumption Today A $5,000 $10,000

  24. The Return on Capital • Supply of loanable funds • Upward sloping • Higher interest rates • More savings • Market supply curve for loanable funds • Horizontal sum • Individual supply curves

  25. Consumption Tomorrow Figure 26.11 G E F • Deriving the supply curve for loanable funds 10% 15% 20% If future consumption is a normal good, increasing the interest rate increases saving. C10 C20 C15 0 Consumption Today

  26. Interest Figure 26.12 • The supply of loanable funds S Plotting the quantity saved on the horizontal axis and the interest rate on the vertical axis yields the supply curve for loanable funds. 0 Loanable funds

  27. The Return on Capital • Demand of loanable funds • Producers – need funds • Purchase capital goods • Opportunity – productive investment • Return to investment

  28. The Return on Capital • Rate of return on investment • π – rate of return on investment • C=R1/(1+π)+R2/(1+π)2+…+Rn/(1+π)n • C – cost today • Ri – return in year i • Invest if • Expected rate of return > market interest rate

  29. The Return on Capital • Demand for loanable funds • Market interest rate • Loanable funds - firm • Market demand curve - loanable funds • Horizontal sum • Demand curves - individual firms • Market supply curve - loanable funds • Horizontal sum • Individual supply curves

  30. Market rate of interest (r) Figure 26.13 • The demand for loanable funds by a firm At each interest rate, the firm will demand a quantity of loanable funds sufficient to finance all those investment projects with rates of return greater than the interest rate 7% 5% 0 Loanable funds $1,500,000 $2,000,000

  31. Figure 26.14 Interest (r) Interest (r) Interest (r) Interest (r) • The market demand curve for loanable funds Demand Demand Demand Demand 7% 5% $1,000 0 0 0 0 $700 $500 $600 $3,200 $2,100 $1,000 $1,500 Firm 1 Firm 2 Firm 3 Market The market demand curve for loanable funds is the horizontal sum of the demand curves for loanable funds of all the individual firms in the market

  32. The Return on Capital • Market for loanable funds • Equilibrium • Intersection: demand and supply • Market rate of interest • Amount of funds • Market rate of interest • Determines - return on capital • Equilibrium - market for loanable funds • Marginal rate of return = market rate of interest

  33. Interest Figure 26.15 • The market for loanable funds S The equilibrium interest rate is determined at the intersection of the market supply curve section for loanable funds and the market demand curve for loanable funds r* E 0 Loanable funds D K*

  34. The Return on Land • Rent - Return on factor • Above amount • Necessary - production process • Supply of land - Perfectly inelastic • Price of land • Determined - demand curve • Demand • Determined - profitability of land • Different uses

  35. Rent Figure 26.16 e S • The market determination of rent The equilibrium rent on land, re , is determined at the intersection of the vertical supply curve for land and the downward-sloping demand curve for land. re Rent D 0 Land Le

  36. The Product Exhaustion Theorem • Marginal productivity theory • Free-market economies • Returns on factors of production • Each factor • Paid marginal revenue product • Functional distribution of income • Distribution of income • Across factors of production • Land, Labor, Capital

  37. The Product Exhaustion Theorem • Product exhaustion theorem • All factors of production • Paid - value of what they produce • Long-run equilibrium (perfect competition) • Sum of shares = 1

  38. Return on Labor in Markets - Less than Perfectly Competitive • Monopolist • Sole seller - good or service • Labor union • Sole supplier of labor • Monopsonist • Sole buyer - good or service • Single employer – old-style factory town

  39. Monopsony • Assumptions • Labor supply function – given • No wage discrimination • Wage discrimination • Different wage rates • Marginal expenditure (ME) • Change - total wage bill • From hiring one additional unit of labor

  40. Wage Figure 26.17 A single firm buys labor services in a monopsonistic market. While the wage level in a competitive market would be wC and the employment level would be LC , the monopsonist chooses a wage level of wM and an employment level of LM. Marginal Expenditure Function (ME) • A monopsonistic labor market Supply of Labor (SL) wC wM w Marginal Revenue Product (MRP) 0 Labor LM LC

  41. Monopsony • Total expenditure (TE=wL) • Total wage • Profit maximization • Hire labor – until ME=MRP • Optimal wage policy • (MRP-w)/w=1/ξ • Monopsonistic exploitation • Factor paid less than MRP

  42. Bilateral Monopoly • Bilateral monopoly • Market • One seller (union) • One buyer (firm) • No true demand or supply curves • No price takers • Actual outcome - depends on • “Bargaining power”

  43. Wage Figure 26.18 ME • A bilateral monopoly SL w wU wC wF MRP 0 MRL Labor LC LF LU Bargaining between a single seller of labor services, a union, and a single buyer leads to an indeterminate wage level, which will lie between wF and wU, and an indeterminate employment level, which will lie between LF and LU.

  44. Alternating Offer Sequential Bargaining • Alternating offer sequential bargaining intitution • Structured method of bargaining • Players - take turns making offers • Offer – accepted • Bargaining stops • Offer - not accepted • Next round • Shrinking value

  45. Figure 26.19 • The alternating offer sequential bargaining game In each period, one player proposes a division of the economic pie and the other player either accepts or rejects that division. If the second player rejects the offer, she proposes a division of a smaller pie in the next period

  46. Alternating Offer Sequential Bargaining • Alternating offer sequential bargaining equilibrium theorem • Finite number of periods • Unique subgame perfect equilibrium • First offer – accepted • Equilibrium offer = sum of decrements

  47. Alternating Offer Sequential Bargaining Neelin, Sonnenschein, Spiegel Experiment • Backward induction • Equilibrium offer • Accept offer • Real people • Experimental evidence • No backward induction

  48. Table 26.1 • The design of the games played in the Neelin, Sonnenschein, Spiegel experiment to evaluate bargaining theory

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