Laborec On
Laborec On
Laborec On
Gregory W. Stutes
Why should I take Labor Econ?
• Most of us will spend 30-40 years of our life
working for an income.
• Labor markets help determine our
– Wealth
– Goods that we can afford
– Who we associate with
– Vacations
– Which schools we will attend
– Maybe, even who we will marry
Labor On 2 Levels
• Traditional Labor Economics
– We will explore how labor markets
work
– As in all of economics, this will be
model building with a purpose.
• Many of the issues in the debate over
social policy concern the labor market
experiences of particular groups.
Questions
• Why did the labor force participation of
women rise throughout the past century?
•
Government Intervention
• Public goods
– Some union workers are worried about noise from machinery
– A sawmill factory wants to finance the research & sell its findings
– Problem?
• Capital market imperfections
– Students/workers are worried about getting loans for college/job
training or some workers would like to move to new city
– Government could make loans to help strengthen the economy
• Markets are missing
– Resident is worried about the band noise from upstairs
– Government could intervene and pass law on noise levels
– Concerns?
Types of Models
• Descriptive
– Like our Circular Flow
• Analytical
– Assumptions or Axioms
– Model—mathematical or logic
– Conclusions deduced from the model
• Math
– Can you really model the world with math
A new look at S&D
• Market Supply for a particular industry
• W is an endogenous variable
• N and are exogenous variable
• Number of Workers
– 142.3 Million
• Industry at a Glance
• Distribution of employment
• http://www.bls.gov/iag/iaghome.htm
Current Population Survey
&
Definitions
– Discouraged Workers
• Persons not in the labor force who want and are
available for a job, but are currently not looking for
employment because they believe no jobs are available.
– Marginally Attached Workers
• Same, but no comment on what they believe
Strange Results
• Can an increase in economic activity increase
the unemployment rate?
• YES
The US Labor Market
April 2009 May 2012 %
(thousands) (thousands) Change
Total working 235,272 242,966 3.27%
population, TP
Labor Force 154,731 155,007 .18%
Employment 141,007 142,287 .91%
Unemployment 13,724 12,720 -7.32%
Not in Labor 80,541 87,958 9.21%
Force
Discouraged 740 830 12.16%
Workers
Marginally 2,100 2,423 15.38%
Attached
Definitions
P o pu lation
(> = 1 6 ye a rs o ld)
L a bo r Fo rce N o t in th e L ab o r Fo rce
• Employment Rate ER = E / LF
• Unemployment Rate UR = U / LF
• Employment-to-population ratio EP = E / TP
The US Labor Market II
Variable April 2009 May 2012
Labor Force Participation Rate, LFPR 65.8% 63.8%
Employment-to-population ratio, EP 59.9% 58.6%
Unemployment Rate, UR 8.9% 8.2%
Labor Force Participation
100
90
80
70
60 Total
50 Men
40 Women
30
20
10
0
1950 1960 1970 1980 1997
• And today
– 2012 63.8% 70.3% (73.2%) 57.8% (59.4)
Unemployment Rate
30
25
20
15 U-rate
10
0
1900
1910
1920
1930
1940
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
• Unemployment rate = U/LF
• If u-rate 5%, we call the overall labor market “tight” – hard for
employers to fill jobs ; if u-rate 7% is “loose”
• Loose during Great Depression; Tight during WWII
• Trends: average u-rate has (non-war, non-GD years)
the variance has
• Conclusion: Labor market is more stable now, but at higher level of unemp
Distribution of Employment
60
50 Agriculture
% of Employment
40 Manufacturing
30 Services (non-
govt)
20 Govt services
10
• Major patterns?
• Agricultural employment has declined dramatically,
while services has expanded
• Size of government has nearly quadrupled
• Workers and firms adapted, and must continue to adapt (demographic)
• These are “snapshots” and miss job transitions that occur between time
points. 1972-86, 11% of manuf jobs destroyed annually, 9% created 2% net
loss
Industries and Occupations
• Agricultural employment has decreased drastically while
employment in services has gone up
• Goods producing jobs kept pace with with increased
employment till 1970 and started declining after that
• Largest increase in the service sector
• Large increase in government sector
• Movement from “primary” via “secondary” to “tertiary”
sectors
• Arrival of the Post-industrial state
Unemployment and Long-Term Unemployment,
Selected European and North American Countries,
2003
Relationship between Wages, Earnings,
Compensation, and Income
Earnings and Compensation
• Total Compensation—Sum of all types of
employee compensation: wages and salaries,
non wage cash payments, and fringe benefits
– Benefits—health insurance, paid vacation,
overtime pay, and paid sick leave
• Gross Total Earnings—Earnings for a period of
time (like a year) before any deductions (like
taxes).
• Straight-time gross earnings—Earnings net of
payroll deductions, but exclude overtime and
other monetary payment
Earnings and Income
• Straight-time Wage rate = price of labor per hour
– Money you’d lose per hour if you had an unauthorized absence. So a
sick day becomes an “employee benefit”.
– e.g., if paid $100 total comp. for 25 hours: 20 spent working, 5 vacation
– then we’ll call the wage $4/hour. Not $5/hour. $80 wages, $20
benefit.
• Structure of Compensation
– Wage rate * hours worked = Earnings
– Earnings + Employee benefits = Total Compensation
– 70% of Total Compensation is from earnings, on average
– Total Compensation + Unearned income = Income
• Nominal vs. Real wages
– Nominal wage = wage in current dollars
– Real wage = nominal wage / some measure of prices
• it is used to indicate a level of purchasing power, so we can
compare across time
• earn $100/day and book costs $50, real wage = 2 books per day
Real wages of U.S. workers
(non-supervisory workers in private sector)
• What happened to real wages from 1980 to 2003?
• Nominal & Real wages 1980 1990 2003 2012
– Avg hourly earnings $6.80 $10.19 $15.38 $20.12
– CPI (base = 1982-84 = 100) 82.4 130.7 184.0
224.6
– Avg hourly earnings $8.30 $7.80 $8.36 $10.24
in 1982-84 dollars
– Avg hourly earnings $15.27 $14.35 $15.38 $16.48
in 2003 dollars
• Nominal wages rising, but prices of good/services also rising,
need to deflate by CPI (fixed bundle of food, housing, clothing, etc.)
• Set cost of our “bundle” in the base period (1982-1984) = 100.
$1 in 2003 appears to buy less than *one-third* what a 1980 $1 did.
• Conclusion: Real wages were stagnant from 1980 to 2003.
• Problems with using a fixed bundle?
The Earnings of Labor
• Nominal and Real Wages
• Nominal wage is what workers get paid in
current dollars
• Real wages are a better measure since they
indicate the purchasing power of those
nominal wages
• Real Wage = (Nominal Wage/Price Index)*100
Consumer Price Index
• Tracks the cost of a fixed basket of goods
195
= $80,000
15.2
= $ 1,026,316