What is the definition of a Labor Market?
the economic arena where employers (demand) and job seekers (supply) interact to negotiate wages, salaries, and working conditions
Goods X and Y are complementary goods. The price of Good X decreases. What probably happens to the wages of workers in the Y industry?
Wage increases
Any change in marginal revenue will also affect:
labor supply
What does the "labor force" consist of?
Employed workers plus unemployed workers actively looking for work
An upward-sloping labor supply curve implies that
more workers are willing to work as the market wage increases.
The average percentage of working-age people in the labor market is called?
(un)employment rate
What factors influence Labor Market supply?
demographics, education/skill levels, wage rates, retirement, etc
If a labor market has low unemployment and high demand for workers, it is considered a:
Tight Market
If the supply of labor goes down while demand stays the same, what happens to wages?
Wages increase
A firm's labor demand curve is typically sloping what direction?
Downward
What is it called when a worker is temporarily between jobs?
Frictional unemployment
Who created the labor market theory?
Alfred Marshall and John Bates Clark
The substitution effect implies that there is a ___ relationship between the wage rate and the quantity of labor supplied
positive
What is a "minimum wage" classified as in a labor market?
a price floor
If the price of capital (a substitute for labor) falls, what direction does the demand for labor shift?
It shifts to the left.
What is the definition of opportunity cost?
the potential benefit, profit, or value of the next-best alternative that is foregone or sacrificed when a specific choice or investment is made
If the demand for a product (e.g., cars) increases, what happens to the demand for the labor used to make it?
The marginal product of labor tells us _____
the additional output produced by the last employee hired
As of 2025, around what percentage of Gen Z is unemployed?
40%
True/False: An increase in the wage rate causes the labor demand curve to shift to the left.
False
What is the The Marginal Product of Labor (MPL)?
the additional output produced by hiring one additional unit of labor (e.g., one worker), while keeping all other inputs, such as capital and technology, constant
What is the main determinant of wage differences between, for example, a neurosurgeon and a fast-food worker?
Productivity and/or skill level
If the firm hires to a point where the marginal expense of labor is greater than the marginal revenue product of labor, then _____
profits could be increased by reducing employment.
Mismatch between workers' skills and job requirements
True/False: The labor demand curve is derived from the marginal revenue product of labor (MRPL).
True