Chapter 14: Problem 14
What is a perfectly competitive labor market?
Chapter 14: Problem 14
What is a perfectly competitive labor market?
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Get started for freeExplain in each of the following situations how market forces might give a business an incentive to act in a less discriminatory fashion. a. A local flower delivery business run by a bigoted white owner notices that many of its local customers are black. b. An assembly line has traditionally only hired men, but it is having a hard time hiring sufficiently qualified workers. c. A biased owner of a firm that provides home health care services would like to pay lower wages to Hispanic workers than to other employees.
Shows information from the supply curve for labor for a monopsonist, that is, the wage rate required at each level of employment. $$\begin{array}{l|l}\hline \text { Labor } & \text { Wage } \\\\\hline 1 & 1 \\\\\hline 2 & 3 \\\\\hline 3 & 5 \\ \hline 4 & 7 \\\\\hline 5 & 8 \\\\\hline 6 & 10 \\\\\hline\end{array}$$ a. What is the monopsonist's marginal cost of labor at each level of employment? b. If each unit of labor's marginal revenue product is \(\$ 13,\) what is the firm's profit maximizing level of employment and wage?
Would you expect the presence of labor unions to lead to higher or lower pay for worker-members? Would you expect a higher or lower quantity of workers hired by those employers? Explain briefly.
How would you expect immigration by primarily low-skill workers to affect American low-skilled workers?
How does a bilateral monopoly affect the equilibrium wage and employment levels compared to a perfectly competitive labor market?
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