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Shapiro–Stiglitz theory

In labour economics, Shapiro–Stiglitz theory of efficiency wages (or Shapiro–Stiglitz efficiency wage model)[1] is an economic theory of wages and unemployment in labour market equilibrium. It provides a technical description of why wages are unlikely to fall and how involuntary unemployment appears. This theory was first developed by Carl Shapiro and Joseph Stiglitz.[2][3]

Introduction edit

When full employment is achieved, if a worker is sacked, he automatically finds his next job soon. In the circumstances, he does not need to exert his effort in his job, and thus full employment necessarily motivates a worker to shirk provided that he is happy with loafing on the job.[3] Since shirking makes a firm's productivity decline, the firm needs to offer its workers higher wages to eliminate shirking. Then all firms try to eliminate shirking, which pushes up average wages and decreases employment. Hence nominal wages tend to display downward rigidity. In equilibrium, all firms pay the same wage above market clearing, and unemployment makes job loss costly, and so unemployment serves as a worker-discipline device.[3] A jobless person cannot convince an employer that he works at a wage lower than the equilibrium wage, because the owner worries that shirking occurs after he is hired. As a result, his unemployment becomes involuntary.

No-shirking condition edit

Suppose utility is a function of wages w and effort e like  , and workers maximize the utility function with a discount rate r. Then let b be the probability per unit time that a worker is dismissed from his job, and now we introduce the expected lifetime utility   of an unemployed individual. Then we find the asset value of employment during a short interval [0, T]

 

because the worker is either dismissed or kept employed during the time. The exponential function appears, because the occasion of dismiss in the interval is once and Poisson distribution is used for the discount rate. Due to the short interval, we approximate the exponential function by 1-rT

 

and simple calculation yields

 
 

Then we find the fundamental asset equation of a worker:

 

For a nonshirker the equation is

 

and for a shirker

 

where q is the probability per unit time that a worker is caught shirking and sacked.[2] Then we see

 
 

The condition   is called the no-shirking condition (NSC), which is expressed as

 

where   is the critical wage.[2] The worker works hard if and only if the NSC is satisfied. Thus if workers get sufficiently high wages, then the NSC is met and they will not shirk. The condition tells us that

  • As the critical wage increases, cet.par., the workers exert more effort.
  • As the critical wage increases, cet.par., the expected lifetime utility of an unemployed individual increases.
  • As the critical wage increases, cet.par., the probability of being detected shirking decreases.
  • As the critical wage increases, cet.par., the discount rate increases.
  • As the critical wage increases, cet.par., the exogenous separation rate increases.

Market equilibrium edit

Let   be the probability of getting a job per unit time. In equilibrium, the flow into the unemployment pool must be equal to the flow out. Thus the probability is

 

where   is the aggregate employment and   is the total labour supply. In reality, an employee is offered his minimum wage   or its equivalent by law. Thus the NSC becomes

 

and we call it the aggregate NSC.[2] These two yields

 

where the unemployment rate is  . This constraint suggests that full employment always should involve shirking.

The aggregate production function   is a function of total effective labour force.

A firm's labour demand is given by equating the cost of hiring an additional employee to the marginal product of labour. This cost consists of wages and future unemployment benefits. Now consider the case where   , then we have

 

In equilibrium,   holds, where   is the equilibrium wage. Then the equilibrium condition becomes

 

This suggests following things.

  • Demand-side approach: If the employer pays less than  , worker's shirking becomes likely to occur (which decreases their productivity). Consequently, the wage is unlikely to decrease, and this is a microscopic mechanism of nominal rigidity. Thus, wage cannot decrease so that it can stabilize employment level, and so unemployment must increase during recession.
  • Supply-side approach: Jobless persons want to work at   or lower, but cannot make a credible promise not to shirk at such wages. As a result, involuntary unemployment occurs.[2]

Job security rules edit

The level of employment is changed by rules about job security. Consider a firm which consists of an employer and homogeneous employees. Then, suppose the profit of the firm is a function of the level of employment N, the lowest wage   and the level of monitoring M chosen by the employer.

 

where g(N) is the production function, L is the value of on-the-job leisure from shirking, and p is the probability that an employee is caught shirking and sacked.[1] Assume that the production function has the upper limit and its second derivative with respect to N is negative. Not to mention, the first derivative is positive. That is a reasonable assumption that the function has its upper bound in term of productivity. Consider, for instance, such a function of time as

 

Obviously its first derivative is positive, and second derivative is negative.

Let R be a measure of the difficulty of dismissing an employee who is caught shirking. Then p is a function of both R and M. The first and second derivatives of the profit with regard to N are:

 
 

The condition for the maximum of the profit is  , and so we have

 

Thus differentiating its both sides with regard to R gives us

 

It turns out that   is negative, which means that the more difficult to sack a shirker the lower employment level.[1]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Sjostrom, W. (Winter 1993). "Job Security in an Efficiency Wage Model". Journal of Macroeconomics. 15 (1): 183–187.
  2. ^ a b c d e Shapiro, C.; Stiglitz, J.E. (1984). "Equilibrium Unemployment as a Worker Discipline Device". The American Economic Review. 74 (3): 433–444.
  3. ^ a b c Yellen, J.L. (1984). "Efficiency Wage Models of Unemployment". The American Economic Review. 74 (2): 200–205.

shapiro, stiglitz, theory, labour, economics, efficiency, wages, shapiro, stiglitz, efficiency, wage, model, economic, theory, wages, unemployment, labour, market, equilibrium, provides, technical, description, wages, unlikely, fall, involuntary, unemployment,. In labour economics Shapiro Stiglitz theory of efficiency wages or Shapiro Stiglitz efficiency wage model 1 is an economic theory of wages and unemployment in labour market equilibrium It provides a technical description of why wages are unlikely to fall and how involuntary unemployment appears This theory was first developed by Carl Shapiro and Joseph Stiglitz 2 3 Contents 1 Introduction 2 No shirking condition 3 Market equilibrium 4 Job security rules 5 See also 6 ReferencesIntroduction editWhen full employment is achieved if a worker is sacked he automatically finds his next job soon In the circumstances he does not need to exert his effort in his job and thus full employment necessarily motivates a worker to shirk provided that he is happy with loafing on the job 3 Since shirking makes a firm s productivity decline the firm needs to offer its workers higher wages to eliminate shirking Then all firms try to eliminate shirking which pushes up average wages and decreases employment Hence nominal wages tend to display downward rigidity In equilibrium all firms pay the same wage above market clearing and unemployment makes job loss costly and so unemployment serves as a worker discipline device 3 A jobless person cannot convince an employer that he works at a wage lower than the equilibrium wage because the owner worries that shirking occurs after he is hired As a result his unemployment becomes involuntary No shirking condition editSuppose utility is a function of wages w and effort e like u w e w e displaystyle u w e w e nbsp and workers maximize the utility function with a discount rate r Then let b be the probability per unit time that a worker is dismissed from his job and now we introduce the expected lifetime utility V u displaystyle V u nbsp of an unemployed individual Then we find the asset value of employment during a short interval 0 T V e w T e r T b T V u 1 b T V e displaystyle V e wT e rT bTV u 1 bT V e nbsp because the worker is either dismissed or kept employed during the time The exponential function appears because the occasion of dismiss in the interval is once and Poisson distribution is used for the discount rate Due to the short interval we approximate the exponential function by 1 rT V e w T 1 r T b T V u 1 b T V e displaystyle V e wT 1 rT bTV u 1 bT V e nbsp and simple calculation yields V e w T b T V u r b T 2 V u r T b T r b T 2 displaystyle V e frac wT bTV u rbT 2 V u rT bT rbT 2 nbsp lim t 0 V e w b V u r b displaystyle lim t rightarrow 0 V e frac w bV u r b nbsp Then we find the fundamental asset equation of a worker r V e w b V u V e displaystyle rV e w b V u V e nbsp For a nonshirker the equation is r V e N w e b V u V e N displaystyle rV e N w e b V u V e N nbsp and for a shirker r V e S w b q V u V e S displaystyle rV e S w b q V u V e S nbsp where q is the probability per unit time that a worker is caught shirking and sacked 2 Then we see V e N w e b V u r b displaystyle V e N frac w e bV u r b nbsp V e S w b q V u r b q displaystyle V e S frac w b q V u r b q nbsp The condition V e S lt V e N displaystyle V e S lt V e N nbsp is called the no shirking condition NSC which is expressed as w r V u e r b q q lt w displaystyle hat w rV u frac e r b q q lt w nbsp where w displaystyle hat w nbsp is the critical wage 2 The worker works hard if and only if the NSC is satisfied Thus if workers get sufficiently high wages then the NSC is met and they will not shirk The condition tells us that As the critical wage increases cet par the workers exert more effort As the critical wage increases cet par the expected lifetime utility of an unemployed individual increases As the critical wage increases cet par the probability of being detected shirking decreases As the critical wage increases cet par the discount rate increases As the critical wage increases cet par the exogenous separation rate increases Market equilibrium editLet a displaystyle a nbsp be the probability of getting a job per unit time In equilibrium the flow into the unemployment pool must be equal to the flow out Thus the probability is a b L N L displaystyle a frac bL N L nbsp where L displaystyle L nbsp is the aggregate employment and N displaystyle N nbsp is the total labour supply In reality an employee is offered his minimum wage w displaystyle overline w nbsp or its equivalent by law Thus the NSC becomes w e e a b r q w lt w displaystyle overline w e frac e a b r q hat w lt w nbsp and we call it the aggregate NSC 2 These two yields e w e q b u r lt w displaystyle e overline w frac e q frac b u r lt w nbsp where the unemployment rate is u N L N displaystyle u frac N L N nbsp This constraint suggests that full employment always should involve shirking The aggregate production function F L displaystyle F L nbsp is a function of total effective labour force A firm s labour demand is given by equating the cost of hiring an additional employee to the marginal product of labour This cost consists of wages and future unemployment benefits Now consider the case where w 0 displaystyle overline w 0 nbsp then we have w d F L d L displaystyle hat w frac dF L dL quad nbsp In equilibrium F L w w displaystyle F L hat w w nbsp holds where w displaystyle w nbsp is the equilibrium wage Then the equilibrium condition becomes F L w e e q b u r e 1 r b a q displaystyle F L hat w e frac e q frac b u r e left 1 frac r b a q right nbsp This suggests following things Demand side approach If the employer pays less than w displaystyle w nbsp worker s shirking becomes likely to occur which decreases their productivity Consequently the wage is unlikely to decrease and this is a microscopic mechanism of nominal rigidity Thus wage cannot decrease so that it can stabilize employment level and so unemployment must increase during recession Supply side approach Jobless persons want to work at w displaystyle w nbsp or lower but cannot make a credible promise not to shirk at such wages As a result involuntary unemployment occurs 2 Job security rules editThe level of employment is changed by rules about job security Consider a firm which consists of an employer and homogeneous employees Then suppose the profit of the firm is a function of the level of employment N the lowest wage W L p displaystyle W frac L p nbsp and the level of monitoring M chosen by the employer p g N N L p N M displaystyle pi g N frac NL p NM nbsp where g N is the production function L is the value of on the job leisure from shirking and p is the probability that an employee is caught shirking and sacked 1 Assume that the production function has the upper limit and its second derivative with respect to N is negative Not to mention the first derivative is positive That is a reasonable assumption that the function has its upper bound in term of productivity Consider for instance such a function of time as f t 1 e t displaystyle f t 1 e t nbsp Obviously its first derivative is positive and second derivative is negative Let R be a measure of the difficulty of dismissing an employee who is caught shirking Then p is a function of both R and M The first and second derivatives of the profit with regard to N are p N g N N L p M displaystyle frac partial pi partial N frac partial g N partial N frac L p M nbsp 2 p N 2 2 g N N 2 displaystyle frac partial 2 pi partial N 2 frac partial 2 g N partial N 2 nbsp The condition for the maximum of the profit is p N 0 displaystyle frac partial pi partial N 0 nbsp and so we have g N N L p M displaystyle frac partial g N partial N frac L p M nbsp Thus differentiating its both sides with regard to R gives us 2 g N N 2 N R L p p R displaystyle frac partial 2 g N partial N 2 frac partial N partial R frac L p frac partial p partial R nbsp It turns out that N R displaystyle frac partial N partial R nbsp is negative which means that the more difficult to sack a shirker the lower employment level 1 See also editInvoluntary unemployment Nominal rigidityReferences edit a b c Sjostrom W Winter 1993 Job Security in an Efficiency Wage Model Journal of Macroeconomics 15 1 183 187 a b c d e Shapiro C Stiglitz J E 1984 Equilibrium Unemployment as a Worker Discipline Device The American Economic Review 74 3 433 444 a b c Yellen J L 1984 Efficiency Wage Models of Unemployment The American Economic Review 74 2 200 205 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shapiro Stiglitz theory amp oldid 1203323444, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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