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SMU SOE Online Seminar (Aug 26, 2021, 4pm-5.30pm): Efficiency Wage Theory Revisited

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TOPIC:  

EFFICIENCY WAGE THEORY REVISITED

 

This paper provides a theory of efficiency wages and involuntary unemployment based on optimal monopsony pricing. It shows that an efficiency wage---that is, a wage exceeding the market-clearing wage---is optimal for a profit-maximizing monopsony if and only if the cost of procurement is not convex at the optimal level of employment. In this case, an efficiency wage that induces excess supply, random rationing and involuntary unemployment is optimal because it reduces the monopsony's procurement cost. If an efficiency wage is optimal absent regulatory intervention, a minimum wage equal to the efficiency wage increases total employment and decreases involuntary unemployment, possibly to the point of eliminating it. Policies that render rationing efficient eliminate involuntary unemployment but can also decrease total employment. The model and insights extend to imperfect competition. In particular, we show that there is not a monotone relationship between competition and involuntary unemployment.
 

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This seminar will be held virtually via Zoom. A confirmation email with the Zoom details will be sent to the registered email by 25 August 2021.
 

Simon Loertscher

University of Melbourne
 
 
Market/Mechanism Design
Industrial Organization
 
 

26 August 2021 (Thursday)

 
 

4.00pm - 5.30pm