Video tutorial: Labour discipline model - YouTube

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6.6, work and wages, the labor discipline
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model. Before going through this section let me
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give you an overview of this model. Every job market has two sides: on
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one side there are workers and on the other side there are employers.
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Employers offer wages to workers and in return they expect the workers to carry
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out certain tasks and put a lot of effort
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into their job. However, at the other end, the workers decide how much effort
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they're going to put into their job, depending on the wage that is offered to
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them. Now let's pause and go back and look at
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the situation from a perspective of the employer.
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Of course any employer wants to make sure that the workers
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put 100 percent of their effort into their job.
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They can do this potentially by doing different things, for instance they can
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specify all the things they expect the workers to do
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in their contract from day one, or they can
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visually monitor the performance of their workers, or ask the workers to fill
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out reports of what they've done on a
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daily basis, but all these methods are very costly
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and sometimes impossible depending on the nature of
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the job. For instance, when it comes to computer programming, you cannot specify
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all the things you expect from a programmer
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in the contract from day one, or you cannot visually or
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daily monitor the performance of a programmer. It doesn't make sense.
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Therefore, there is a better way for the employers to motivate their workers to
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work hard and that way is to give them high
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enough wages to increase the employment rent for the workers. What do I mean by that?
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Let's assume I am a computer programmer
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for Google. If Google offers me a wage that is much
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higher to the other competitors, let's say Facebook and
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Apple, then I have an incentive to make sure that Google does not fire me,
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and I don't lose my job. So I have an incentive to work hard:
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I know that my boss in Google may not be able to
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monitor my performance on a daily basis, but I know that in the long term he or
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she can figure out whether I'm putting a lot of
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effort into my job or not, so I have an incentive because of
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high wages - because of the employment rent that Google is offering me to work
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hard. Now with these insights in mind we're gonna go back to our model and
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analyze the labor market from the perspective of the employee,
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from the perspective of a worker. Here we have an example of one worker,
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Maria, and we're to talk about her best
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response curve. The x-axis represents the hourly wage
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that is offered to Maria by her boss, and the y-axis represents
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the level of effort that Maria decides to put into her job,
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depending on the wage that is offered to her if she puts hundred percent of
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effort. We represent this by one. Now the key information here is Maria's
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reservation wage. If she decides to stay at home and not
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to work at all, she gets paid six dollars per hour, so
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in order to stay motivated and work hard she has to be
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offered a wage that is at least higher than six dollars per hour.
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This is Maria's best response curve. At the beginning this curve is very
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steep but as the hourly wage and the effort
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level increases this curve becomes flatter.
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Why that's the case? Because we have to remember
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that there is disutility associated with increasing your effort
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level. Pushing yourself to work harder is
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unenjoyable. Let's assume that I'm putting 10 percent of effort into
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the job. Here I can be motivated to push myself
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to work harder, with a small increase in wages, but the
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story is different when I reach 0.8 level of my effort.
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If i put 0.8 of effort into my job pushing myself to work harder becomes
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much, much more unenjoyable, therefore I have
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to be compensated by a bigger increase in wages.
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In other words, the higher the effort level,
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it becomes more unenjoyable to push yourself to work harder,
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therefore you have to be compensated by a higher increase in wages,
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and that's why this curve has this shape and we call the slope of these
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curves, which is declining, the marginal rate of transformation -
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transforming hourly wage into effort level.
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Now let's look at the labor market from the perspective of an employer.
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Let's scroll down and go to 6.7, wages, effort and profits in the labor
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discipline model. Imagine that I'm an employer. I want to
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maximize my profit. How do I do that? I try to make sure that
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I get the maximum effort possible out of the
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wage that I'm paying to my workers. How does that work?
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Let's scroll down and use the same graph as before but think about the situation
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from an employer's perspective.
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The x-axis is the wage that I pay to my workers
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and the y-axis is the effort that they're willing to put
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into their job. Now I imagine a scenario in my head as an employer.
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One scenario is that I pay $10 per hour
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and the worker puts 0.45 units of effort. Now if I draw a line
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here, all the dots that exist in this line
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have the same effort to wage ratio - they give me the
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same profit, so therefore I'm indifferent about all
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these dots in this line and we call this line
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an isocost line.
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I can think about other scenarios as well, or other
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isocost lines. Let's focus on this line. The slope of this line is less,
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so therefore it gives me less profit, why? Because for the same wage that I
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paid before I get lower effort in this line. What's the most
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profitable line here? This one of course. It is the
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steepest linem, it gives me the highest effort per wage.
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If I pay the same wage as before in this scenario
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I get a higher effort, so as an employer naturally I want to move to an
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isocost line which is steeper and here we call the slope of the line
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the marginal rate of substitution -
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in other words my willingness to increase
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wages to motivate my workers to work harder. So, so far
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we started by analyzing the labor market from the perspective of a worker,
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then we moved to the labor market from the perspective
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of an employer. Now we're going to talk about the equilibrium.
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Equilibrium happens when the willingness of the worker
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matches the willingness of the employer. So let's scroll down
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to analyze the equilibrium. Let's still imagine I'm the employer, and now
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this time there is a real worker on the other side, Maria.
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I offer a wage to Maria and Maria decides how much effort she's going to put into
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her job depending on the wage. This is Maria's best response curve.
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Remember, as an employer I don't see this curve, I
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only offer a wage to Maria and can observe her effort every once in
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a while in the medium term. Remember I cannot observe Maria's effort
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on a daily basis but in the medium term I can
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tell whether she's putting effort into a job or not.
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So as an employer I offer a wage which is just a little bit above
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the reservation to Maria. Maria starts working
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and puts this level of effort into her job, point C,
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but then after a while I realize that if I increase Maria's wage
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she is willing to put more effort into her job and this makes more
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profit for me, why? Because the pace of the increase in her
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effort is higher than the pace in increase in wages. I repeat. The pace in the increase
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in her effort is higher than pace in the increase in
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in her wages until point A. Right here I make the most profit.
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Now of course A is more profitable than C,
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why? Because if we go back to our isocost line
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C lies in a line which is costlier than this line.
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Of course I wish I could move to this line which is the lowest cost line out
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of the three, but that's beyond Maria's willingness to
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work, so the equilibrium is A.
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Here my willingness to pay higher wages for higher effort matches Maria's
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willingness to work harder for a higher wage.
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Now in the end let me end with this question:
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how does this equilibrium change if suddenly a recession hits
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and the unemployment shoots up?