馃攳
Video tutorial: Labour discipline model - YouTube
Channel: unknown
[3]
6.6, work and wages, the labor discipline
[6]
model. Before going through this section let me
[9]
give you an overview of this model.
Every job market has two sides: on
[13]
one side there are workers and on the
other side there are employers.
[17]
Employers offer wages to workers and in
return they expect the workers to carry
[22]
out certain tasks and put a lot of
effort
[25]
into their job. However, at the other end,
the workers decide how much effort
[31]
they're going to put into their job,
depending on the wage that is offered to
[35]
them.
Now let's pause and go back and look at
[39]
the situation from a perspective of the
employer.
[43]
Of course any employer wants to make
sure that the workers
[46]
put 100 percent of their effort into
their job.
[51]
They can do this potentially by doing
different things, for instance they can
[56]
specify all the things they expect the
workers to do
[60]
in their contract from day one, or they
can
[63]
visually monitor the performance of
their workers, or ask the workers to fill
[68]
out reports of what they've done on a
[70]
daily basis, but all these methods are very costly
[74]
and sometimes
impossible depending on the nature of
[77]
the job. For instance, when it comes to
computer programming, you cannot specify
[83]
all the things you expect from a
programmer
[86]
in the contract from day one, or you
cannot visually or
[90]
daily monitor the performance
of a programmer. It doesn't make sense.
[97]
Therefore, there is a better way for the
employers to motivate their workers to
[101]
work hard
and that way is to give them high
[106]
enough wages to increase the employment rent for the workers. What do I mean by that?
[113]
Let's assume I am a computer programmer
[116]
for Google. If Google offers me a wage that is much
[122]
higher to the other competitors, let's
say Facebook and
[125]
Apple, then I have an incentive to make
sure that Google does not fire me,
[131]
and I don't lose my job.
So I have an incentive to work hard:
[136]
I know that my boss in Google may not be
able to
[141]
monitor my performance on a daily basis,
but I know that in the long term he or
[148]
she can figure out whether I'm putting a lot of
[151]
effort into my job or not,
so I have an incentive because of
[156]
high wages - because of the employment rent that Google is offering me to work
[164]
hard. Now with these insights in mind
we're gonna go back to our model and
[170]
analyze the labor market
from the perspective of the employee,
[175]
from the perspective of a worker.
Here we have an example of one worker,
[181]
Maria, and we're to talk about her best
[184]
response curve.
The x-axis represents the hourly wage
[188]
that is offered to Maria by her boss, and
the y-axis represents
[192]
the level of effort that Maria decides
to put into her job,
[197]
depending on the wage that is offered to
her if she puts hundred percent of
[201]
effort. We represent this by one.
Now the key information here is Maria's
[207]
reservation wage.
If she decides to stay at home and not
[212]
to work at all, she gets paid six dollars per hour, so
[216]
in order to stay motivated and work hard
she has to be
[219]
offered a wage that is at least higher
than six dollars per hour.
[227]
This is Maria's best response curve.
At the beginning this curve is very
[233]
steep but as the hourly wage and the effort
[238]
level increases this curve becomes flatter.
[243]
Why that's the case? Because we have to
remember
[246]
that there is disutility associated with increasing your effort
[252]
level. Pushing yourself to work harder is
[257]
unenjoyable. Let's assume that
I'm putting 10 percent of effort into
[262]
the job. Here I can be motivated to push myself
[268]
to work harder, with a small increase in wages, but the
[273]
story is different when I reach 0.8 level of my effort.
[279]
If i put 0.8 of effort into my job
pushing myself to work harder becomes
[285]
much, much more unenjoyable, therefore I have
[288]
to be compensated by a bigger increase in wages.
[294]
In other words, the higher the effort
level,
[298]
it becomes more unenjoyable to push
yourself to work harder,
[304]
therefore you have to be compensated
by a higher increase in wages,
[310]
and that's why this curve has this
shape and we call the slope of these
[316]
curves, which is declining, the marginal rate of transformation -
[323]
transforming hourly wage
into effort level.
[330]
Now let's look at the labor market from
the perspective of an employer.
[334]
Let's scroll down and go to 6.7,
wages, effort and profits in the labor
[341]
discipline model.
Imagine that I'm an employer. I want to
[346]
maximize my profit.
How do I do that? I try to make sure that
[351]
I get the maximum effort possible out of the
[355]
wage that I'm paying to my workers. How does that work?
[359]
Let's scroll down and use the same graph
as before but think about the situation
[365]
from an employer's perspective.
[369]
The x-axis is the wage that I pay to my
workers
[373]
and the y-axis is the effort that
they're willing to put
[377]
into their job. Now I imagine a scenario
in my head as an employer.
[383]
One scenario is that I pay $10
per hour
[386]
and the worker puts 0.45
units of effort. Now if I draw a line
[394]
here, all the dots that exist in this line
[398]
have the same effort to wage ratio - they give me the
[403]
same profit, so therefore I'm indifferent about all
[406]
these dots in this line and we call this
line
[410]
an isocost line.
[414]
I can think about other scenarios as
well, or other
[417]
isocost lines. Let's focus on this line.
The slope of this line is less,
[425]
so therefore it gives me less profit,
why? Because for the same wage that I
[431]
paid before I get lower
effort in this line. What's the most
[436]
profitable line here?
This one of course. It is the
[441]
steepest linem,
it gives me the highest effort per wage.
[445]
If I pay the same wage as before in this
scenario
[449]
I get a higher effort, so as an
employer naturally I want to move to an
[455]
isocost line which is steeper
and here we call the slope of the line
[461]
the marginal rate of substitution -
[465]
in other words my willingness to
increase
[469]
wages to motivate my workers to work
harder. So, so far
[475]
we started by analyzing the labor
market from the perspective of a worker,
[480]
then we moved to the labor market from the perspective
[484]
of an employer. Now we're going to talk
about the equilibrium.
[488]
Equilibrium happens when the willingness
of the worker
[492]
matches the willingness of the employer.
So let's scroll down
[499]
to analyze the equilibrium. Let's still
imagine I'm the employer, and now
[503]
this time there is a real worker on the
other side, Maria.
[507]
I offer a wage to Maria and Maria decides
how much effort she's going to put into
[511]
her job depending on the wage.
This is Maria's best response curve.
[516]
Remember, as an employer I don't see this curve, I
[520]
only offer a wage to Maria
and can observe her effort every once in
[525]
a while in the medium term.
Remember I cannot observe Maria's effort
[530]
on a daily basis but in the medium term I can
[533]
tell whether she's putting effort into a
job or not.
[537]
So as an employer I offer a wage
which is just a little bit above
[544]
the reservation to Maria. Maria starts
working
[548]
and puts this level of effort into her
job, point C,
[554]
but then after a while I realize that
if I increase Maria's wage
[558]
she is willing to put more
effort into her job and this makes more
[565]
profit for me, why? Because
the pace of the increase in her
[570]
effort is higher than the pace in increase
in wages. I repeat. The pace in the increase
[576]
in her effort is higher than pace in the
increase in
[580]
in her wages until point A. Right here I make the most profit.
[588]
Now of course A is more profitable than
C,
[591]
why? Because if we go back to our isocost line
[594]
C lies in a line which
is costlier than this line.
[602]
Of course I wish I could move to this
line which is the lowest cost line out
[606]
of the three, but that's beyond Maria's willingness to
[610]
work, so the equilibrium is A.
[615]
Here my willingness to pay higher wages
for higher effort matches Maria's
[622]
willingness to work harder for a higher wage.
[628]
Now in the end let me end with this
question:
[631]
how does this equilibrium change if
suddenly a recession hits
[636]
and the unemployment shoots up?
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





