ECON 480
Labor Economics
1. Catalog Entry
ECON 480
Labor Economics
Credit hours (3)
Prerequisites: ECON 206
Covers history of the labor movement, union-management relations, the non-unionized worker, wage theory, and unemployment in context of the application of economic theory to problems of labor.
2. Detailed Description of Course
The primary objective of this course is to introduce students to the recent history of U.S. labor policy, trends in employment, unemployment, wages and income distribution, and theoretical explanations for these policies and labor market outcomes. With regard to the latter, the course is designed to introduce the students to both neoclassical and institutional explanations of the wage determination process. When taught as an oral-intensive course it also includes very close scrutiny of the most recent labor policy debates.
Topic Outline
1) Introduction to the Labor Markets
2) The Supply of Labor
3) Labor Force Participation
4) The Demand for Labor
5) The Determination of Wages
6) Human Capital
7) Occupational Wage Differentials
8) Discrimination in the Labor Market
9) Collective Bargaining
10) Current Issues
3. Detailed Description of Conduct of Course
The following teaching strategies may be employed:
Lectures, discussion, possibly some student debates depending on the instructors’ preference.
4. Goals and Objectives of the Course
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:
1) Explain the shift from Keynesian high wage labor policies in the 1960s and
1970s to labor cost
containment policies in the 1980s and 1990s.
2) Discuss recent trends in the demand for labor: types of jobs, employment levels,
unemployment, foreign competition.
3) Discussed demographic changes in labor supply: population growth, race, gender,
and age
composition.
4) Examine those theoretical factors that determine the firm’s demand for labor
and constitute its
derived nature.
5) Examine those theoretical factors that determine the household supply of labor.
6) Demonstrate how the interaction of firm demand for and household supply of
labor determine
the equilibrium wage rate in a perfectly competitive market structure.
7) Examine the effects of shifts in demand and supply on the equilibrium wage
rate.
8) Discuss the operation of the labor market in reality with respect to employment
(occupational
structure) and wage structures.
9) Discuss labor market outcomes during the 1980s and 1990s as evidence in the
distribution of
income and the distribution of wealth.
10)Demonstrate the effect of monopoly in the product market on wage determination.
11)Demonstrate the effect of oligopoly in the product market on wage determination.
12)Demonstrate the effect of monopsony in the labor market on wage determination.
13)Examines theoretically the effect of labor unions on the wage determination
process using
wage-employment preference paths.
14)Discuss the importance of differing levels of human capital to the distribution
of jobs and
wages in the economy.
15)Discuss the decision-making process involved in both public and private investments
in
improving human capital.
16)Introduce the notion of a heterogeneous labor supply and job content to the
discussion of
wage determination.
17)Examine the theoretical underpinnings of segmented labor markets.
18)Compare human capital and segmented labor market theories of wage determination
and
income distribution.
5. Assessment Measures
Students may be evaluated on the basis of tests, homework problems, other assignements, and class participation.
6. Other Course Information
None
Review and Approval
September 2, 2014
December 2013 C. Vehorn
April 16, 2012
April 13, 2009
September 7, 2001 N. Hashemzadeh, Chair