Chapter 4
Specific Factors �and Income Distribution
Preview
4-2
Motivation
4-3
The Specific Factors Model
4-4
What Is a Specific Factor?
4-5
What Is a Specific Factor?
4-6
The Specific Factors Model
QC = QC (K, LC) (4-1)
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Fig. 4-1: The Production Function for Cloth
The production function is upward-sloping and concave
The shape of the production function reflects the law of diminishing marginal returns.
Adding one worker to the production process (without increasing the amount of capital) means that each worker has less capital to work with.
Therefore, each additional unit of labor adds less output than the last.
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Fig. 4-2: The Marginal Product of Labor
Figure shows the marginal product of labor, which is the increase in output that corresponds to an extra unit of labor.
It is also equal to the slope of the production function from the previous figure.
Because of the law of diminishing marginal returns, each additional unit of labor adds less output than the last.
The marginal product of labor therefore declines as more labor is used.
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Production Possibilities
LC + LF = L (4-3)
4-10
Production Possibilities
4-11
Fig. 4-3: The Production Possibility Frontier in the Specific Factors Model
4-12
Production Possibilities
4-13
Prices, Wages, and Labor Allocation
MPLC x PC = w (4-4)
MPLF x PF = w (4-5)
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Fig. 4-4: The Allocation of Labor
The demand for labor in the food sector is measured from the right.
The horizontal axis represents the total labor supply L.
The two sectors must pay the same wage because labor can move between sectors.
If the wage were higher in the cloth sector, workers would move from making food to making cloth until the wages become equal.
Where the labor demand curves intersect gives the equilibrium wage and allocation of labor between the two sectors.
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Fig. 4-5: Production in the Specific Factors Model
At the production point, the production possibility frontier must be tangent to a line whose slope is minus the price of cloth divided by that of food.
Formally, relation between relative prices and output is following:
-MPLF/MPLC = -PC/PF
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Prices, Wages, and Labor Allocation
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Fig. 4-6: An Equal-Proportional Increase in the Prices of Cloth and Food
When both prices change in the same proportion, no real changes occur.
The wage rate (w) rises in the same proportion as the prices, so real wages (i.e., the ratios of the wage rate to the prices of goods) are unaffected.
The real incomes of capital owners and landowners also remain the same.
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Fig. 4-7: A Rise in the Price of Cloth
When only PC rises, labor shifts from the food sector to the cloth sector and the output of cloth rises while that of food falls.
The wage rate (w) does not rise as much as PC since cloth employment increases and thus the marginal product of labor in that sector falls.
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Fig. 4-8: The Response of Output to a Change in the Relative Price of Cloth
The economy always produces at the point on its PPF where the slope of PPF equals minus the relative price of cloth.
Thus, an increase in relative price of cloth causes production to move down and to the right along the PPF. It results in higher production of cloth and lower production of food.
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Fig. 4-9: Determination of Relative Prices
The previous figure shows that an increase in the relative price of cloth leads to an increase in the output of cloth relative to that of food.
Thus, the relative supply of cloth (RS) is upward sloping.
Equilibrium relative prices and quantities are determined by the intersection of the relative supply curve (RS) with the relative demand curve (RD).
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Prices, Wages, and Labor Allocation
Suppose that PC increases by 7%. Then, the wage would rise by less than 7%.
Workers: cannot say whether workers are better or worse off. It depends on the relative importance of cloth and food in workers’ consumption.
Owners of capital are definitely better off. Why?
Landowners are definitely worse off. Why?
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Fig. 4A-1: Output Is Equal to the Area under the Marginal Product Curve
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Fig. 4A-2: The Distribution of Income within the Cloth Sector
The real labor income is equal to the real wage times employment.
The rest of real output accrues as real income to the owners of capital.
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Fig. 4A-3: A Rise in PC Benefits the Owners of Capital
A rise in price of cloth PC leads to less than proportional increase of wage w, so the real wage w/PC falls.
As a result, the real income of capitalists rises.
Note, that the real income of capitalists rises not only in terms of cloth (price of which has risen), but also in terms of food (price of which has unchanged).
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Fig. 4A-4: A Rise in PC Hurts Landowners
A rise in price of cloth PC leads to an increase of wage w, so the real wage in terms of food w/PF rises.
As a result, the real income of landowners falls.
Note, that the real income of landowners falls not only in terms of food (price of which has not changed), but also in terms of cloth (price of which has risen).
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Fig. 4-10: Trade and Relative Prices
Let’s assume that there are no differences in preferences of consumers, so the home relative demand is the same as the world relative demand.
The relative price of cloth prior to trade is determined by the intersection of the economy’s relative supply of cloth and its relative demand.
Free trade relative price of cloth is determined by the intersection of world relative supply of cloth and world relative demand.
Opening up to trade increases the relative price of cloth in domestic economy whose relative supply of cloth is larger than for the world as a whole.
4-27
Fig. 4-11: Budget Constraint for a Trading Economy and Gains from Trade
Without trade, the economy’s output of a good must equal its consumption.
International trade allows the mix of cloth and food consumed to differ from the mix produced.
The economy is able to afford amounts of cloth and food that the country is not able to produce itself.
The budget constraint with trade lies above the production possibilities frontier.
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Income Distribution and Trade Politics
4-29
Income Distribution and Trade Politics
4-30
Trade and Unemployment
4-31
Fig. 4-12: Unemployment and Import Penetration in the United States
4-32
International Labor Mobility
4-33
Fig. 4-13: Causes and Effects of International Labor Mobility
Start with OL1 workers in Home earning a lower real wage (point C) than the L1O* workers in Foreign (point B). Why?
Workers in the home country want to migrate to the foreign country where they can earn more.
If no obstacles to labor migration exist, workers move from Home to Foreign until the purchasing power of wages is equal across countries (point A), with OL2 workers in Home and L2O* workers in Foreign.
Emigration from Home decreases the supply of labor and raises real wage of the workers who remain there.
Immigration into Foreign increases the supply of labor and decreases the real wage there.
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Fig. 4-13: Causes and Effects of International Labor Mobility
Labor migration increases world output.
The value of foreign output rises by the area under its MPL* curve from L1 to L2
The value of domestic output falls by the area under its MPL curve from L2 to L1
World output rises because labor moves to where it is more productive (where wages are higher).
The value of world output is maximized when the marginal productivity of labor is the same across countries.
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Fig. 4-13: Causes and Effects of International Labor Mobility
Workers initially in Home benefit while workers in Foreign are hurt by inflows of other workers.
Landowners in Foreign gain from the inflow of workers decreasing real wages and increasing output.
Landowners in Home are hurt by the outflow of workers increasing real wages and decreasing output.
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International Labor Mobility
4-37
Tab. 4-1
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Summary
4-39
Summary
4-40
Summary
4-41