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Macroeconomic Analysis Econ 6022 Level I Lecture 3 Fall, 2011 1 / 41 Overview • The Production Function • Labor Market - The Demand for Labor - The Supply of Labor - Labor Market Equilibrium 2 / 41 The Production Function • Roughly speaking, goods and services produced by the economy is GDP. • How do we describe this production process? • It is rather complicated ... • Simplification: One goods economy! • Factors of production - Capital (K) Labor (N) Others (raw materials, land, energy) Productivity of factors depends on technology and management • Production function: relationship between input (production factors) and output 3 / 41 The Production Function • The production function Y = A · F (K , N) (3.1) - Parameter A is "total factor productivity" (the effectiveness with which capital and labor are used) - Variable N is labor input - Variable K is capital • We define as capital the tools needed for production, i.e., the physical objects that extend our ability or do work for us. 4 / 41 Five features of capital: 1. It is productive: it raises the amount of output that a worker can produce. 2. It is produced: Capital has itself been produced through the process of investment (private or public). 3. It is rival in its use: only a limited number of people can use a given piece of capital at one time. 4. It yields a return: Since it makes a worker more productive, the worker or its firm will be willing to pay (the owner) to use it. 5. It wears out: Using capital causes it to wear down a little, which is called depreciation. 5 / 41 The properties of the Production Function • Two general Properties - Slopes upward: more of any input produces more output - Slope becomes flatter as input rises: diminishing marginal product as input increases • Show them graphically - Graph production function - Output vs. one input - hold other input and A fixed • Show them mathmatically 6 / 41 Figure 3.1 The Production Function Relating Output and Capital 7 / 41 Marginal Product of Capital • Marginal product of capital, MPK = ∆Y /∆K - Equal to slope of production function graph (Y vs. K) - MPK always positive - Diminishing marginal productivity of capital: MPK declines as K rises 8 / 41 Figure 3.2 The marginal product of capital 9 / 41 Marginal Product of Labor • Marginal product of labor, MPN = ∆Y /∆N - Equal to slope of production function graph (Y vs. N) - MPN always positive - Diminishing marginal product of labor: MPN declines as L rises 10 / 41 Figure 3.3 The production function relating output and labor 11 / 41 The Cobb-Douglas Production Function • Cobb-Douglas production function is most often used in macroeconomics. Y = A · K α N 1−α • The relationship between input and output in industrial economies is described reasonably well by Cobb-Douglas production function. • The key is to estimate the parameter α • Data show: α ≈ 0.3 • We could also show theoretically that 0 < α < 1 12 / 41 Math Representation • Actually, all the discussion on production function can be summarized with a few equations. ∂Y ∂Y - Property 1: MPK = > 0; MPN = >0 ∂K ∂N ∂MPK ∂MPN - Property 2: < 0; <0 ∂K ∂N • Take Cobb-Douglas production function for example: - Property 1: MPK = A · α · K α−1 · N 1−α > 0 ∂MPK = A · α · (α − 1) · K α−2 · N 1−α < 0 - Property 2: ∂K 13 / 41 Constant Returns to Scale • Additional property of production function • Def: If we multiply the quantities of each input by some factor, the quantity of output will increase by the same factor. F (zK , zN) = zF (K , N) • Intuitively, it makes sense: double all the inputs of production and output doubles • That’s “the standard replication argument ” . 14 / 41 Constant Returns to Scale • It is also useful and often used later on: • Transform production function in aggregate term to per worker term 1 1 Y = F (K , N) = F N N ...or defining k = K N and y = K N , N N =F K ,1 N Y N, rewrite K 1 Y =F ,1 N N • Output per worker is a function only of capital per worker. y = F (k , 1) = f (k ) 15 / 41 Supply shocks • We have been discussing about K , N, α and now we turn to the other element of the production function. • Supply shocks: change in productivity parameter A - Supply shock = productivity shock = a change in an economy’s production function - Supply shocks affect the amount of output that can be produced for a given amount of inputs - Shocks may be positive (increasing output) or negative (decreasing output) - Examples: weather, inventions and innovations, government regulations, oil prices 16 / 41 Supply shocks • Show supply shocks graphically • Supply shocks shift graph of production function (Fig. 3.4) • Negative (adverse) shock: Usually slope of production function decreases at each level of input (for example, if shock causes parameter A to decline) • Positive shock: Usually slope of production function increases at each level of output (for example, if parameter A increases) 17 / 41 Figure 3.4 An adverse supply shock that lowers the MPN 18 / 41 Labor Market • Discussion on labor market is closely linked with production function. We will see immediately. • Market for labor v.s. market for ice cream. • Labor input is demanded by FIRMS. • Labor input is supplied by INDIVIDUALS. • Equilibrium wage clears the market. 19 / 41 The Demand for Labor • How much labor do firms want to use? Assumptions - Hold capital stock fixed (short-run analysis) - Workers are all alike (simplification) - Labor market is competitive (taking price as given) - Firms maximize profits (optimization) • A thought experiment: marginal benefit and cost of hiring an additional unit of labor (MPN and real wage) • Analysis at the margin: costs and benefits of hiring one extra worker (Fig. 3.5) - If w > MPN, profit rises if number of workers declines - If w < MPN, profit rises if number of workers increases - Firms’ profits are highest when w = MPN 20 / 41 Figure 3.5 The determination of labor demand 21 / 41 The Demand for Labor • The marginal product of labor and the labor demand curve - Labor demand curve shows relationship between the real wage rate and the quantity of labor demanded - It is the same as the MPN curve, since w = MPN at equilibrium - So the labor demand curve is downward sloping; firms want to hire less labor, the higher the real wage 22 / 41 The Demand for Labor • Factors that shift the labor demand curve - Note: A change in the wage causes a movement along the labor demand curve, not a shift of the curve - Supply shocks: Beneficial supply shock raises MPN, so shifts labor demand curve to the right; opposite for adverse supply shock - Size of capital stock: Higher capital stock raises MPN, so shifts labor demand curve to the right; opposite for lower capital stock 23 / 41 The Demand for Labor • Aggregate labor demand - Aggregate labor demand is the sum of all firms’ labor demand - Same factors (supply shocks, size of capital stock) that shift firms’ labor demand cause shifts in aggregate labor demand 24 / 41 Figure 3.6 The effect of a beneficial supply shock on labor demand 25 / 41 The Supply of Labor • Supply of labor is determined by individuals - Aggregate supply of labor is the sum of individuals’ labor supply - Labor supply of individuals depends on labor-leisure choice - Total available time = working time + leisure time 26 / 41 The Supply of Labor • The income-leisure trade-off - Utility depends on consumption and leisure U(c, l): c consumption and l leisure time Price of leisure time relative to consumption good? Real wage rate, w, and nominal real wage rate , W , W - w= P 27 / 41 Real wages and labor supply • An increase in the real wage has offsetting income and substitution effects - Substitution effect: Higher real wage encourages work, since the price of leisure time is higher - Income effect: Higher real wage increases income for same amount of work time, so person can afford more leisure, so will supply less labor 28 / 41 The Supply of Labor • A pure substitution effect: a one-day rise in the real wage - A temporary real wage increase has just a pure substitution effect, since the effect on wealth is negligible • A pure income effect: winning the lottery - Winning the lottery doesn’t have a substitution effect, because it doesn’t affect the reward for working - But winning the lottery makes a person wealthier, so a person will both consume more goods and take more leisure; this is a pure income effect 29 / 41 The Supply of Labor • A long-term increase in the real wage - The reward to working is greater: a substitution effect toward more work - But with higher wage, a person doesn’t need to work as much: an income effect toward less work - The longer the high wage is expected to last, the stronger the income effect; thus labor supply will increase by less or decrease by more than for a temporary reduction in the real wage 30 / 41 The Supply of Labor • Empirical evidence on real wages and labor supply - Overall result: Labor supply increases with a temporary rise in the real wage - Labor supply falls with a permanent increase in the real wage 31 / 41 The Labor Supply Curve • Increase in the current real wage should raise quantity of labor supplied? • YES, NO or It depends? • Labor supply curve relates quantity of labor supplied to current real wage by holding other things equal (including future wage rates). • Labor supply curve slopes upward because higher current wage encourages people to work more • Future wage rate is a curve shifter. 32 / 41 Figure 3.7 The labor supply curve of an individual worker 33 / 41 The Supply of Labor • Factors that shift the labor supply curve - Wealth: Higher wealth reduces labor supply (shifts labor supply curve to the left, as in Fig. 3.8) - Expected future real wage: Higher expected future real wage is like an increase in wealth, so reduces labor supply (shifts labor supply curve to the left) 34 / 41 Figure 3.8 The effect on labor supply of an increase in wealth 35 / 41 Aggregate labor supply • Aggregate labor supply rises when current real wage rises - Some people work more hours - Other people enter labor force - Result: Aggregate labor supply curve slopes upward 36 / 41 Factors increasing labor supply • Decrease in wealth • Decrease in expected future real wage • Increase in working-age population (higher birth rate, immigration) • Increase in labor force participation (increased female labor participation, elimination of mandatory retirement) 37 / 41 Labor Market Equilibrium • Labor market equilibrium: Labor supply equals labor demand • Equilibrium wage, w • Equilibrium labor input, N • How does the labor market respond to shocks? 38 / 41 Figure 3.10 Labor market equilibrium 39 / 41 Figure 3.11 Effects of a temporary adverse supply shock on the labor market 40 / 41 Labor Market Equilibrium • Full-employment output • Full-employment output = potential output = level of output when labor market is in equilibrium Ȳ = A · F (K , N̄) (3.4) • affected by changes in full employment level or production function (example: supply shock, Fig. 3.11) 41 / 41