S'identifier

To analyze the demand for labor by a firm, several key assumptions are made.

First, it is assumed that the goal of the firm is to maximize its profits.

Next, is the assumption of the law of diminishing marginal product. It means that, as the firm hires additional units of labor, each subsequent worker contributes less to the overall output than the previous one. For example, in a factory, the first worker may produce a substantial number of units, but each additional worker will contribute fewer units as the factory becomes increasingly crowded and capital inputs become scarcer.

Labor homogeneity is another assumption. This means that all workers are considered identical in terms of skills and productivity. The firm views each laborer as interchangeable, with no preference for one worker over another based on experience or specific skills.

Furthermore, the product market is assumed to be perfectly competitive. In such a market, there are numerous buyers and sellers of the product, ensuring that no single firm can influence the market price of the product.

Similarly, the labor market is also assumed to be perfectly competitive. Numerous firms are vying to hire workers, and many laborers are seeking employment. Because many other firms are hiring workers, a single firm cannot influence the wage paid to workers.

In the current analysis, the firm is assumed to be operating in the short run with only one variable input, which is labor.

Du chapitre 15:

article

Now Playing

15.3 : The Competitive Profit Maximizing Firm's Demand for Labor: Assumptions

Economics for Labor Markets

11 Vues

article

15.1 : Factors of Production

Economics for Labor Markets

34 Vues

article

15.2 : The Demand for Labor: Firm

Economics for Labor Markets

34 Vues

article

15.4 : The Marginal Product of Labor I

Economics for Labor Markets

18 Vues

article

15.5 : The Marginal Product of Labor II

Economics for Labor Markets

26 Vues

article

15.6 : The Value of the Marginal Product of Labor and the Demand for Labor

Economics for Labor Markets

54 Vues

article

15.7 : The Competitive Firm's Decision to Hire Labor

Economics for Labor Markets

29 Vues

article

15.8 : The Market Demand for Labor

Economics for Labor Markets

26 Vues

article

15.9 : The Market Supply of Labor

Economics for Labor Markets

20 Vues

article

15.10 : Equilibrium in the Labor Market

Economics for Labor Markets

39 Vues

article

15.11 : Shift in Labor Demand I

Economics for Labor Markets

41 Vues

article

15.12 : Shift in Labor Demand II

Economics for Labor Markets

6 Vues

article

15.13 : Shift in Labor Supply

Economics for Labor Markets

19 Vues

article

15.14 : Effect on Equilibrium: Shift in Labor Supply

Economics for Labor Markets

15 Vues

article

15.15 : Effect on Equilibrium: Shift in Labor Demand

Economics for Labor Markets

13 Vues

See More

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.