Relationship between wage rate and labour demand
Elasticity of labour demand
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
Labour supply
Labour supply diagram
Key factors affecting labour supply
Elasticity of labour supply
draw diagram
Equilibrium market wage rate
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
Key roles for trade unions
Key causes of labour market failure
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
Aim of competition policy
Government intervention to control mergers
Government intervention to control monopolies
Price regulation
RPI - X - Takes the RPI and subtracts the efficiency gains that the regulator has determined can reasonably be achieved by the firm in question (X).
RPI + K - Takes the RPI and adds the additional capital spending a firm has agreed with the regulator is necessary.
Advantages of price capping
Disadvantages of price capping
Profit regulation
Performance standards and quality standards
Other regulation
Controls in response to the credit crisis - The banking industry is now subject to heavy regulation in terms of the amounts it can lend and the risks it can take.
Controls from outside the UK - Direct controls from the EU take precedence over U.K. rules e.g. carbon emission limits.
Government intervention to promote contestability
Privatisation, competitive tendering and deregulation