Only Exceptional Proff
The Firm: Capital Accumulation and Labor Extraction
I. Introductory
In this chapter we’ll explore the use of capital and labor by firms and industries. Until
now we’ve been assuming that the capital structure of the firms is given and that production
levels are changed by employing more or less labor (with, of course, the appropriate complement
of needed raw materials). That is, we have been analyzing the behavior of the firm in the short
run, where the existing capital structure is a result of past decisions informed by the technology
in use at that time. In our discussion of the firm all of this has been summarized by what we have
been calling the capital-labor ratio, k. What we now need to do is explain how the capital-labor
ratio is determined in the first place, and explore the relationship between capital, labor, and
production, as well as the relationship between the capital-labor ratio and the relative price of
capital and labor.
II. Capital labor ratios
We begin by reviewing the role of capital-labor ratios in the cost of production.
Remember that the unit cost of a firm (or industry) can be represented in the following terms
!" = !!" + !!! ·! !" 5.1
where the first part of the expression (w/ap) represents the firm’s average variable cost (which, in
this case is also the firm’s unit labor cost), and the second part [(i+d)·k/ap] represents the firm’s
average fixed cost. Keep in mind that, to keep our attention focused on the key economic
relationship between capital and labor, we have simplified the unit cost of a firm by imagining
that the only two inputs are direct labor and capital. A more realistic, and complicated, equation
would incorporate the role of raw materials in the firm’s variable cost and the role of overhead
labor in the firm’s fixed cost. This would make the argument a bit more realistic but it wouldn’t
add to our understanding of the underlying relationship between capital and labor, which is the
point of theoretical economics.
Now, in focusing on average fixed cost, it should be apparent that it’s behavior will
depend on the capital-labor ratio (k) and the productivity of labor (ap), since the rate of interest
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(i), and the depreciation rate (d) are thought of as given and beyond the firm’s control; that is,
afc=f(k/ap). In the short run, when the firm’s capital structure is given, output can only be
changed through changes in the usage of labor. But, this in turn means that the measured capital-
labor ratio must be changing with production levels. Specifically, the measured capital-labor
ratio must be decreasing as output increases (with a given capital structure, increasing the hours
of work or the number of workers, against a given capital structure, implies that the measured
capital-labor ratio is getting smaller; as the denominator increases against a fixed numerator, the
ratio k must fall).
But, what of the productivity of labor? In the case of firms exhibiting a fixed proportions
technology, the productivity of labor remains stable so long as the technology of production and
labor relations remains stable. This will ensure that the firms average fixed cost will gradually
decline as output (and the usage of labor) increases. The capital-labor ratio gradually falls while
the productivity of labor remains constant, ensuring a gradually declining average fixed cost with
growing output levels.
In the case of firms exhibiting diminishing returns, the productivity of labor gradually
falls, even if technology and labor relations remain stable. At first, this would seem to suggest
that at some point, as output grows, average fixed cost might begin to increase as the decline in
labor productivity begins to outweigh the decline in the measured capital-labor ratio. But, it turns
out, this does not occur. While both the productivity of labor and the measured capital-labor ratio
will be declining as output increases, the decline in the productivity of labor will always be less
than the decline in the capital-labor ratio; ensuring, once again, a gradually declining average
fixed cost with growing output levels.
The reason for this last result is not readily apparent, but the intuition behind it involves
remembering the distinction between the marginal product of labor and the average product of
labor. As output increases, in the context of diminishing returns, the usage of labor also increases
but at increasingly greater amounts. This means that as output grows one unit at a time, the
capital-labor ratio will have to be falling at increasingly faster rates. At the same time, an
increasingly greater usage of labor will be required in the production of each extra unit of output.
The marginal product of labor will be falling, but not as rapidly as the decline in the capital-labor
ratio. And since the marginal product of labor must fall faster than the average product of labor,
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in the context of diminishing returns, this will guarantee that the average product of labor will
decline at a slower pace than the capital-labor ratio.
In the construction of an establishment (a firm), the capitalist invests in an amount of
capital that he/she assumes is the minimally necessary amount to produce, with the usage of
labor, a volume of output that will meet expected demand. That is, the capitalist has an idea of
the optimal relationship between the amount of capital and labor needed to produce the normal
level of output. This optimal or normal capital-labor ratio, kn, represents the combination of
capital and labor the firm is assuming will be in effect when producing the expected or normal
level of output. One would expect a profit maximizing capitalist to choose a capital-labor ratio
that would minimize its cost of producing the expected level of demand. But once the
establishment (firm) has been created with its full complement of buildings, machines and
inventory, then it’s quite possible that the demand for the product, and consequently the
employment of labor, will differ from the expected amount. And this, in turn, will have the effect
of causing the measured capital-labor ratio (the capital-labor ratio that is actually being used) to
differ from the normal capital-labor ratio (the capital-labor ratio for which the firm was
designed). If the demand for the product happens to be less than anticipated, then the firm has no
option but to use less labor than normal, causing the measured capital-labor ratio to be higher
than the normal capital-labor ratio. Likewise, if the demand for the product happens to be greater
than anticipated, then the firm – assuming it still has some leeway – will have to use more labor
than normally expected, causing the measured capital-labor ratio to be lower than the normal
capital-labor ratio.
The normal capital-labor ratio should thus be thought of as that combination of capital
and labor that allows the firm to produce its normal output at the lowest unit cost. It represents
the optimal size of the establishment (or firm) for the production of the expected, normal, level
of output. But once that capital structure is in place, the firm’s output can only be changed by
changing the usage of labor. In the context of a firm experiencing diminishing returns, what this
means is that the optimal size of the firm, the point at which the measured capital-labor ratio is
equal to the normal capital-labor ratio, occurs when unit cost is at it’s minimum – the minimum
point on the average cost curve. Production levels beyond that point involve increasingly greater
amounts of labor, in relation to capital, causing unit cost to rise. But production levels below that
4
point involve more capital than is needed with the declining amounts of labor, causing unit cost
to be greater than at the normal level of production.
In the case of firms experiencing a fixed proportions technology the optimal size of the
firm, the point at which the measured capital-labor ratio equals the normal capital-labor ratio,
occurs when unit cost is at a minimum; and this corresponds to the maximum amount of output
the firm can produce with that combination of capital and labor. But, the problem with this is that
it leaves the firm with no way of meeting a sudden increase in demand beyond the normal level.
As a result, it’s common for firms with a fixed proportions technology to choose a capital-labor
ratio that will allow them to meet the usual, normal, level of demand, but with enough excess
capacity to meet the upswings in demand that occur over the course of a fiscal year.
At any moment in time it’s common to find within an industry a range of firms operating
with differing capital-labor ratios. The firms are producing the same, or similar, output, but the
technologies used by the firms might differ from each other because of the time at which the
different technologies were introduced into the businesses. The newer or more aggressive firms
will generally be operating with the most efficient technologies and, as such, operating with the
higher and more productive capital-labor ratios. The older and/or less aggressive firms will be
operating with older technologies, lower capital-labor ratios, and consequently less productive
technologies. Firms that are operating with higher capital-labor ratios often have a cost
advantage, lower unit cost, brought on by the increased productivity made possible by the higher
capital-labor ratio and improved technology. Firms that are operating with a lower capital-labor
ratio will tend to have a higher unit cost as a result of the lower productivity associated with the
lower capital-labor ratio and less efficient technology. While these differences may persist for
quite some time, in the context of perfect competition these costs differences would vanish over
time. Any cost advantage that a firm might have, as a result of using a highly productive
technology (a high capital-labor ratio), would soon be eliminated as all the other firms in that
same industry rush to adopt the same technology in an effort to remain competitive. In the
extreme, all the firms in the industry would end up using the exact same technology, the same
capital-labor ratio, and – as a result – incurring the same unit cost. Competition, therefore, tends
to bring about conformity in the capital-labor ratios employed by the firms in an industry.
A similar process is operating within any one firm. That is, it’s not uncommon to find
within firms a range of technologies being used in the production of output. The newer machines
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may have higher capital-labor ratios and, consequently, a greater level of productivity, while the
older machines have lower capital-labor ratios and, as a result, a lower level of productivity. The
firm will generally be operating with the more productive machinery but as the demand for the
product begins to exceed the normal level, the firm will bring out the older technologies so as to
meet the greater than normal demand. The growing reliance upon older technologies will have
the effect of increasing the unit cost of the product.
III. Choice of technique
The following graph shows two possible capital/labor ratios. The lines k1 and k2 represent
two possible capital/labor ratios, that is two possible techniques of production. As will soon be
shown, moving along any one technique, from the origin to the northeast corner of the graph,
means that more is being produced – as should be expected since both more capital and labor are
being employed. Yet, if the technique of production remains unchanged, then inputs must grow
at the same rate as output because of the fixed capital-labor ratio. Of course, technology can
change and when it does it usually involves not only a change in the capital-labor ratio it also
involves a change in the productivity of labor, a phenomenon not depicted in this graph. Higher
capital-labor ratios are associated with higher levels of labor productivity, while lower capital-
labor ratios are associated with lower levels of labor productivity. That is, firms and/or industries
invest in relatively capital-intensive (i.e. high capital-labor ratios) techniques only if the extra
productivity made possible by the increased capital counterbalances or outweighs the rising cost
associated with higher capital-labor ratios, allowing unit cost to remain unchanged or fall.
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In general, there are two huge traditions in the discussion of productive techniques: one
tradition (usually associated with the Classical or Marxian tradition, but also reflected in the
contemporary engineer’s view of the world) argues that the technique of production, the capital-
labor ratio that a firm or industry chooses is driven almost exclusively by the knowledge
embodied in existing technology. That is, the way in which any one product is produced, the
combination of capital and labor that’s used to produce the product, is a function of the
technology that exists. From this perspective it doesn’t really matter what happens to the relative
price of capital (in terms of labor), when figuring out how to produce the product. Capital can be
relatively expensive or relatively cheap, but since there’s only one way of producing the good
then the capital/labor ratio that’s embodied in existing technology will be the one that’s used.
From this perspective, the ratio of capital to labor is determined by the technology of production.
The other tradition (associated with the Neoclassical tradition) argues that the technique
of production, the capital-labor ratio, employed by a firm depends on the relative price of capital
and labor. If, for example, the relative price of capital (in terms of labor) is high, then firms will
employ a technique of production that economizes on capital and uses more labor, that is, firms
will be motivated to pick a low capital/labor ratio technique. On the other hand, if the relative
price of capital (in terms of labor) is low, then the firms will employ a technique of production
that economizes on labor and uses more capital, that is, they will pick a high capital/labor ratio
technology.
Too be sure, there’s an element of truth in both traditions. Obviously, at any moment in
time there’s a technology that exists in the production of things that firms must use and relative
prices have little to do with the choice. But it’s also true that at any moment in time there’s an
Labor
C ap
it al
k1
k2
k1 > k2
7
existing range of technologies, though usually somewhat narrow, that are employed in the
production of a good, permitting a firm to choose within that set. The technology chosen from
that set would more than likely depend on the relative prices of the inputs. Thus, while it makes
sense to imagine that capitalists change their technique of production in response to a change in
the relative prices of capital and labor, it does not make sense to imagine that the range of input
substitutability is as extreme as neoclassical theory suggests; there’s a way in which the range of
technologies available for the production of almost anything is constrained within a limited
range, with the extreme version of this being that there exists only one technology.
We’ll explore these issues by first explaining the neoclassical view and then pointing out
the difficulties confronting that perspective.
Since this whole discussion involves a discussion of choice of technique, that is of the
possible capital-labor ratios a firm might use in the production of a good, it should be apparent
that we’re in the long run, a situation where all inputs can be changed and there is no one fixed
input. Of course, the one “input” that could be thought of as fixed is technology itself, namely
the knowledge that currently exists regarding the various possible ways in which a product can
be produced. But the problem with this interpretation is that technology isn’t an input as such;
rather it’s the knowledge that’s available to organize inputs in specific ways. A change in
technology is reflected in a change in the use of inputs as well as a change in the volume or type
of output.
Neoclassical theory starts out by imagining that capital and labor can be used in any
combination to produce any level of output, in short, the neoclassical theory of production
assumes extreme substitutability among the inputs to production. In addition, neoclassical theory
typically assumes that all inputs experience diminishing returns. If we conceive of production in
this fashion then the total production function can be depicted as shown in the following graph.
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Neoclassicals refer to this as a well-behaved production function. What they mean by this is that
all the inputs experience diminishing returns and that the inputs can be substituted for one
another in an infinite variety of ways to produce the product.
Now, if we imagine cutting the above production function at the point depicted by the
dotted curve, then we could imagine this “mountain” sliced off with a flat surface at that level.
Every point on that surface would represent the same level of output, so any combination of
labor and capital on that surface could produce that same level of output. Note, however, that it’s
only the combinations of capital and labor that are on the edge of the mountain, the rim of the
flat surface closest to the origin, where one finds the most efficient possible combinations of
capital and labor to produce that same level of output. If we repeated this exercise for each level
of output we’d end up with a very large set of rims showing the most efficient combinations of
capital and labor in the production of the corresponding level of output. Rotating the above graph
so that the output axis is facing us, jutting straight out from the paper, then what we’d see is a
large number of theses rims showing the various combinations of capital and labor that produce
various levels of output. The following graph depicts this idea.
Q
K
L
9
The three curves show three possible “rims” of the huge number that could conceivably
exist. These “rims” are called isoquants to underscore the idea that all the possible combinations
of capital and labor depicted on any one “rim” generates the same level of output. So, for
example, in looking at isoquant Q1, all the possible combinations of capital and labor that lie on
that isoquant generate the same level of output. The same interpretation applies to isoquant Q2
and isoquant Q3, with the understanding that the further the isoquant is from the origin, the
greater the output, and vice versa.
The rate at which labor can be substituted for capital in the production of the same level
of output is called the rate of technical substitution, i.e. RTS(L.K). This rate of technical
substitution can be thought of as the negative of the slope of the isoquant at any given point. This
slope shows the extra amount of capital that would have to be given up for the extra amount of
labor that would be needed to produce the same level of output. It turns out that the rate of
technical substitution can also be depicted as the ratio of the marginal product of labor to the
marginal product of capital. That is,
RTS(L,K) = - ΔK/ΔL = MPL/MPK
Note that if isoquants have the strictly convex shape, as shown in the graph, then the
RTS(L,K) would be diminishing as the usage of labor increases (and the usage of capital
decreases) in the production of any one level of output. What this means is that as more labor is
substituted for capital, in the production of any one level of output, the amount of capital the firm
(or industry) would be willing to give up, and still produce the same volume of output, would get
increasingly smaller. This implies that there’s some minimal level of capital the firm thinks it
must have, as it’s usage of labor increases, but the volume of output remains unchanged.
Labor
C ap
it al
Q1
Q2
Q3
∆K
∆L
Slope = -∆K/∆L = RTS(L,K)
10
Of course, there’s no reason why the isoquants must have these shapes, the idea of a
strictly convex isoquant is a theoretical creation generated by neoclassical theorists intent on
showing that the choice of technique is driven exclusively by relative prices; a proposition which
requires that substitutability be a feature of the system. In short, strictly convex isoquants were
not generated as a result of observing real production processes; they were instead generated by
the need to demonstrate that the choice of technique is driven by relative prices. If inputs are not
easily substitutable, then the isoquant map ends up looking like the following graph, which
depicts a fixed proportions technology.
The way to interpret these fixed- proportions isoquants is that, for example in the
production of any one level of output, say Q1, there’s a specific combination of capital and labor
that must be used to produce that output, namely the combination K1 and L1 corresponding to the
point where the isoquant kinks along the capital labor technique k. Any usage of labor that
exceeds this amount, on the horizontal portion of the Q1 isoquant, would still require the same
amount of capital, namely K1, and involve an unnecessary use of labor (labor would be
redundant). The same holds true for any usage of capital that lies along the vertical portion of the
Q1 isoquant. Any usage of capital beyond K1 that amount would be redundant. Thus the only
combination of capital and labor that must be used to produce Q1 units of output would be K1,
L1.
Let’s continue with the neoclassical assumption that isoquants are strictly convex, i.e.
extreme substitutability and no fixed proportions. What combination of inputs would the firm use
Labor
C ap
it al
k
Q1
Q2
L 1
K 1
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in the production of any one given level of output? To answer this question we must remember
that cost can be represented as
TC = w·L+v·K
We can rewrite this equation to make capital a function of everything else. If we assume that TC
is fixed, then we can call this equation an isocost since it would show all the combinations of
capital and labor, given wages and rental rates, which generate the same cost.
The following graph shows one way of thinking about the way in which a firm goes
about minimizing its cost of producing any one level of output. The graph shows one isoquant,
Q1, and two isocost lines. The capital intercept of any one isocost will always be TC/v, while the
labor intercept of any one isocost will always be TC/w. The slope of any one isocost will always
be –w/v, that is, the relative price of labor in terms of capital (the ratio of the wage rate to the
rental rate). Note that, since the wage rate and the rental rate are assumed fixed, then the cost of
production will depend on the amounts of labor and capital the firm employs in the production of
Q1.
€
K = TC v − w v ⋅ L
Labor
C a p it
a l
Lb
Kb
a
Q1
TC/v
TC/w TC'/w
TC'/v
b
c
RTS(L,K) > w/v
RTS(L,K) = w/v
RTS(L,K) < w/v
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The firm could start out by trying to use the combination of capital and labor represented
by point a. But at that point, the rate of technical substitution of labor for capital exceeds the
relative price of labor in terms of capital. Another way of saying this is
That is, at point “a” the firm gets a little more output from a dollar spent on labor than it does
from a dollar spent on capital. As a result, a firm intent on using the least cost combination of
inputs would be induced to use a bit more labor and a bit less capital. That is, the firm would
move down the isoquant. But as it does so, the isocost line starts shifting down. This process will
continue until the firm finds that one combination of capital and labor that minimizes it’s cost.
That point will occur when the rate of technical substitution of labor for capital just equals the
relative price of labor in terms of capital. Or stated differently, when
The same logic applies if instead we had started at point b. Under these circumstances the
rate of technical substitution of labor for capital would fall short of the relative price of labor in
terms of capital. That is
implying that the firm gets a little more output from a dollar spent on capital than it does from a
dollar spent on labor. This would induce the firm to move up the isoquant in its search for more
capital and less labor. But as it moves up the isoquant the isocost line start shifting closer to the
origin. Eventually, once again, the firm will find itself moving to that combination of capital and
labor that minimizes its cost and this will occur where the slope of the isocost is just equal to the
slope of the isoquant, that is, the rate of technical substitution of labor for capital just equals the
relative price of labor in terms of capital (or stated differently, the marginal product generated by
a dollar spent on labor equals the marginal product of a dollar spent on capital).
Now, let’s imagine that the firm has chosen its capital labor ratio, i.e. it has chosen it’s
technique of production. Once the capital is put in place then there isn’t much the firm can do, if
output levels change, other than to alter the usage of labor with the existing amount of capital.
What this means is that, in the short run, where the capital structure of the firm is given, changes
in production levels can be met by using more or less labor, but in ways that inevitable involve
€
MPL w
> MPK v
€
MPL w
= MPK v
€
MPL w
< MPK v
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some inefficiency. The following graph provides one way of thinking about this. Imagine that the
firm is using a capital labor ratio depicted by point b, which, as can be seen, involves the least
cost combination of capital and labor, since the slope of the isocost is equal to the slope of the
isoquant in the production of Q1 level of output. Now, what if sales, and consequently output,
either increase to Q2 or decrease to Q0? Note that in both cases, the firm has no option but to
either increase or decrease the usage of labor with the fixed amount of capital. If the firm is
induced to produce Q2 units of output then it will be using a combination of labor and capital that
is not cost minimizing. At that point the rate of technical substitution of labor for capital would
be less than the relative price of labor in terms of capital, clearly implying that cost minimization
is not taking place.
If instead the firm is induced to produce Q0 units of output, then it will be using a
combination of labor and capital that, once again, is not cost minimizing. In this case the rate of
technical substitution of labor for capital would be greater than the relative price of labor in
terms of capital, implying once again that cost minimization is not taking place.
What if, instead, the relative price of labor in terms of capital changes? That is, assume
that the firm has chosen the cost minimizing combination of capital and labor, but sometime after
having constructed the buildings and installed the machinery, the relative price of labor in terms
of capital changes. What happens then? Well, then this would have the effect of inducing the
firm to search for another combination of capital and labor that would, once again, minimize its
cost in the production of output. In other words, the search for the right cost minimizing
combination of capital and labor. The search for another capital to labor ratio still has the same
0 L0
Labor
C ap
it al
a
Q1
b c
RTS(L,K) > w/v
RTS(L,K) = w/v
RTS(L,K) < w/v
K fixed
Q2
Q0
L1 L2
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properties that we’ve outlined above but with an added twist. The following graph provides a
visual image of the issues involved.
This graph assumes that the firm is first producing Q1 units of output and, given the
relative prices in effect at the time, has chosen the cost minimizing combination of capital and
labor depicted by point a, that is, K1 units of capital and L1 units of labor. Now, if the relative
price of labor in terms of capital were to decrease, either because the wage rate falls or the rental
rate increases, or some combination of the two (so long as the percentage decline in the wage
rate exceeds the percentage increase in the rental rate), then the slope of the isocost line would
flatten out and the firm would be induced to search for a technique (a capital to labor ratio) that
involves more labor and less capital. The new cost minimizing point that would be chosen, in the
production of the same volume of output, is shown as point b. The firm would now be employing
K3 units of capital and L2 units of labor.
The movement from a to b is referred to as the substitution effect. It underscores the idea
that it makes sense to imagine that profit-seeking capitalists would use less capital and more
labor if the relative price of labor in terms of capital were to fall; that is techniques of production
would move from being relatively capital intensive to being relatively labor intensive. It’s
important to note, however, that the movement from a to b would be time consuming and involve
a total abandonment of technique a, liquidating the assets associated with the method of
production, and building an entirely different structure corresponding to the more labor intensive
technique b. Perhaps another way of thinking of this is that a firm that has multiple plants
(establishments), might very well have two plants operating at the same time: the plant
Labor
C a p it
a l
L1 L3L2
K1
K2
K3
a
b
c
Q1
Q2
TC/v
TC/w
15
represented by technique “a” can be thought of as having been constructed when the relative
price of labor in terms of capital was high and the plant represented by technique “b” can be
thought of as having been constructed when the relative price of labor in terms of capital was
low. Regardless of the interpretation, neoclassical theory calls the shift to an alternative
technology in the face of a change in relative prices, while holding levels of output constant, as
the substitution effect.
However, the story doesn’t end there. Indeed it gets more complicated. If the relative
price of labor in terms of capital diminishes, say as a result of a reduction in the wage rate, then it
must be that the short run cost of production will be falling. The impact this reduction in short
run cost might have on the price of the product and the consequent demand and thus production
levels is complicated and depends on the kind of output market the firm is operating in
(competitive or monopolistic) and the price elasticity of demand for the output of the firm. The
simplest case (though still complex) is that of perfect competition. In a perfectly competitive
output market, a reduction in the firms’ unit cost of production would mean (since all firms are
using the same technology) that the total volume of output offered on the market would increase
causing the market price to fall (a growing supply against a given demand causes the price to
fall). As the price falls this induces an increase in quantity demanded (consumers purchase more
as the price decreases). However, the amount by which quantity demanded increases as a result
of the reduction in market price depends on the price elasticity of demand. In some cases the
quantity demanded might be significant, in other cases it might be relatively trivial. There is no
way of knowing a-priori, it would depend on the nature of the market being studied.
What if, instead, the market were monopolized, that is, the firm is the single seller of the
product. Then under these circumstances, a reduction in unit cost, brought on by the reduction in
the wage rate, might induce the firm to charge a lower price as a way of enticing more customers
to purchase the product. The amount by which quantity demanded would increase as a result of a
reduction in unit price would, once again, depend on the price elasticity of demand. What’s more
all of this assumes that the firm is single-mindedly focused on maximizing profits. If instead the
firm is a satisficer, the monopolist might be quite content to simply allow unit cost to fall while
holding onto the existing output price, which in turn would not bring about a change in demand
and consequently output levels, but it would bring about an increase in profits.
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The point of the above two paragraphs is that what happens to quantity demanded as a
result of a reduction in the wage rate depends on a number of particular circumstances that
cannot be universalized to all firms, it can only be considered on a case by case basis. But,
however it works out, it clearly makes sense to imagine that a change in the wage rate will bring
about a change in unit cost which might also affect output price and consequently quantity
demanded and, ultimately, levels of production. And, of course, a change in production levels
(different isoquants) will also bring about a change in productive techniques.
The chain of events that starts with a change in the wage rate to a change in output, and
consequently to a change in the combination of capital and labor employed in the production of
the product is called the output effect. This is depicted in the above graph as the move from point
“b” to point “c”. The graph is drawn on the assumption that the reduction in the relative price of
labor to capital has brought about an increase in production levels as a result of the growth in
quantity demanded brought on by the lower price which in turn was motivated by the lower unit
cost. It’s important to note that this need not always be the case. The output effect might be
positive, as shown in the above graph, or it might be zero or even negative; it would all depend
on the structure of the output market being considered. For pedagogical purposes we will assume
that the output effect is positive, in the sense that the wage reduction eventually leads to a greater
level of production and, consequently a different combination of capital and labor.
We close this section by noting that, if substitutability is not a feature of a productive
technology, then a change in relative prices will have absolutely no impact on the capital labor
ratio. This is shown in the graph below, which depicts a fixed capital labor ratio in the
production of a given level of output. Note that it doesn’t really matter what the relative price of
labor in terms of capital might, relative prices might be (w/v)1 or (w/v)2, yet the amount of
capital and labor that will be used to produce Q1 units of output will remain K1 units of capital
and L1 units of labor.
17
IV. Elasticity of Substitution
The ease with which labor can be substituted for capital in the production of a given level
of output is called the elasticity of substitution, which we’ll denote by the symbol !!. It provides a way of measuring the degree to which the capital-labor ratio, k, changes as a result of a change
in the rate of technical substitution, RTS(l,K). Formally, the elasticity of substitution can be
expressed as
!! = %∆!
%∆!"#(!,!) ,
where the numerator, %∆!, represents the percentage change in the capital-labor ratio, and the denominator, %∆!"#(!,!), represents the percentage change in the rate of technical substitution of labor for capital.
The elasticity of substitution can vary between zero and infinity. If the production
function involves a fixed-proportions technology, then there is no substitutability between labor
and capital and !! = 0. This is the case of the isoquant depicted in the above graph, where there’s only one capital-labor ratio and a change in the rate of technical substitution will not
affect the choice of technology; that is, the capital-labor ratio remains fixed.
If instead the production function involves an infinite range of possible technologies, i.e.
infinite substitutability, then the elasticity of substitution between labor and capital is infinite and
!! = ∞. The isoquants reflecting this theoretical possibility would be straight, negatively sloped,
Labor
C a p it
a l
k
Q1
(w/v)1 (w/v)2
L1
K1
18
lines. In this case the rate of technical possibility is constant (i.e., the rate at which labor is
substituted for capital remains fixed along the isoquant) and, as a result, an infinite number of
capital-labor ratios is possible along that isoquant. The following graph depicts this unreal
theoretical possibility. It shows two possible capital-labor ratios, out of the infinite amount that’s
possible on the given isoquant.
V. The Demand for Labor (a Neoclassical Perspective)
We’ll start by exploring the demand for labor under conditions of extreme competition;
assuming that the firm is a price taker in both the output and input market. After we’ve explored
that case, we’ll study the demand for labor on the assumption that the firm is a price setter, with
a certain amount of monopoly power, in both the output and input markets. The intermediate
possibilities (such as when the firm is price setter in the input market but a price taker in the
output market, or vice versa) will be left unexplored since they do not significantly change the
conclusions arrived at in the first two cases.
The Price-Taking Firm (Diminishing Returns)
We’ve already seen that the price-taking firm will maximize profits when marginal
revenue is equal to marginal cost. Since, for price taking firms, marginal revenue is the price of
the product, while marginal cost (in a context where labor is the only variable input) is equal to
Labor
C ap
it al
Q1
k 1
k 2
19
the wage rate divided by the productivity of labor, the profit-maximizing rule can be restated in
the following terms:
Rearranging the last expression provides us with the following:
The expression on the left side of this equality measures the marginal revenue generated by one
extra hour of labor, it is called the marginal value product of labor. Given this definition, it
should be clear that what this equality is saying is that the profit maximizing firm will hire labor
up to the point at which the marginal value added by one extra hour of labor is equal to the wage
that must be paid for that extra hour of labor. This is the core principle underscoring the
neoclassical theory of the demand for labor (or any input for that matter).
A graphic version of this idea is presented below. This graph is assuming that the firm is
experiencing diminishing marginal returns. The value of the marginal product of labor is
diminishing because, even though the product price remains unchanged (since the firm is a price
taker), the marginal product of labor declines due to the presence of diminishing returns.
The profit-maximizing firm will hire L1 units of labor when the wage rate is w1, because
at that point, the marginal value product of labor just equals the wage rate. If, for whatever
€
Πmax ⇒ mr = mc ⇒ p = w mpL
€
p⋅ mpL = w
Labor
w ,
M V
P
MVPL=p*mpL
w1
L1
20
reason, the firm hired an amount of labor that falls short of L1, the firm would quickly discover
that the marginal value product of labor is greater than the wage rate, inducing the firm to hire
more labor in an effort to capture more profits. On the other hand, if the firm hired more than L1
amount of labor, then it would realize that the marginal value product of labor is less than the
wage rate, inducing the firm to cute back on the use of labor in an effort to capture more profits.
L1 is thus the profit-maximizing amount of labor, given the firm’s capital/labor ratio, the price of
the product, and the wages of labor. It’s important to underscore that this is an equilibrium
position; that is, it represents a position the firm would move toward if everything else remained
the same. Another way of thinking about this is that, so long as conditions are fairly stable, then
real firms would be gravitating toward that position, in the vicinity of the profit-maximizing
usage of labor. It’s also important to note that all of this assumes the firm can hire more or less
labor, and consequently produce more or less output, without affecting output price or the wages
of labor; the context, in short, is one of extreme competition where the firm is a price taker in
both the output market and the labor market.
Another way of viewing this relationship is to introduce the value of the average
productivity of labor. Doing so helps to bring out the difference between the marginal product of
labor (or the marginal value product) and the average product of labor (or the average value
product). The following graph introduces the average value product of labor. Note that it’s the
same graph is the previous one, with the exception that the average value product is now shown
explicitly.
Labor
w ,
M V
P , A
V P
MVPL=p*mpL
w1
L1
p*apL
AVPL=p*apL
w1
21
This graph makes it easier to see that the firm’s profit-maximizing choice of labor will
ensure that the value generated by the average worker will be greater than the average wage rate.
This, of course, is what one would expect of a capitalist enterprise. The whole idea of a business
is to generate a profit, and this in turn requires that the value that’s generated by the labor force
exceed the cost of hiring that labor force. The difference between the average value product (i.e.
the average product of labor multiplied by the price of the output) and the wage rate must be
sufficient to cover the firm’s overhead and target profits, it’s a measure of the surplus value
that’s generated by labor.
Karl Marx’s notion of the rate of surplus value, also known as the rate of exploitation,
measures the amount of surplus value generated per unit of variable capital and can be expressed
as
€
s'= s v
where s represent the surplus value generated by labor and v represents variable capital, the value
of labor power. If we think of the value of labor power as the going wage rate and surplus value
as the difference between the average value product of labor and the wage rate, then the rate of
exploitation can also be restated as
€
s'= s v
= p⋅ ap − w
w
Thus the profit maximizing choice of the firm affects not only the volume of output the
firm will produce, but the amount of labor it will hire as well as the rate of exploitation. Since
we’re assuming extreme competition, it must be the case that the productivity of labor is as high
as it can possibly be. Thus, profit maximization under conditions of extreme competition, where
the firms are price takers, also implies that the rate of exploitation is as high as it can be, given
existing technology, the price of output, and the wage rate.
The Price-Setting Firm (Diminishing Returns)
In the case of price setting firms, the logic is the same; the only difference is that the firm
must now pay attention to the marginal revenue it brings in from selling the extra output
generated by the marginal worker. Remember that in the case of price-setting firms, marginal
22
revenue is always lower than price. Given this, the profit-maximizing choice of labor for a price-
setting firm experiencing diminishing returns, can now be restated as
€
mr⋅ mpL = w
The expression on the left is called the marginal revenue product of labor. It measures the
marginal revenue generated by the marginal product of labor. While the equation looks different,
the underlying logic is the same: the profit maximizing firm will hire labor up to the point at
which the marginal revenue product of labor just equals the wage rate. However, it’s important
to note that this firm is moving the output price up and down to arrive at the profit maximizing
level of output which, in turn, impacts the usage of labor. So, at the same time the firm is finding
the appropriate profit-maximizing price in the output market, it’s also finding the profit-
maximizing usage of labor. The two decisions are occurring simultaneously. The following
graph provides a visual image of this logic, but focusing exclusively on the input market, in this
case, the demand for labor.
It’s important to note that while the logic is similar to the case of a price-taking firm, the
difference is that the price setter will be moving the price up and down until the profit-
maximizing level of output (and consequently usage of labor) is found. In the above diagram, the
firm’s price choice is built into the average value product of labor curve. However, this average
value product of labor curve is falling at a steeper rate than the average value product of labor
curve for the price-taking firm. The reason for this is that both the price and the average product
of labor are falling with increased production (sales) levels. In the case of the price-taking firm,
the price remains constant while the productivity of labor declines due to diminishing returns.
Labor
w ,M R P, A V P
MRPL=mr*mpL
w1
L1
p*apL
AVPL=p*apL
w1
23
But in the case of the price-setting firm, the price falls (due to the downward sloping demand
curve) at the same time that the productivity of labor is also declining due to diminishing returns.
Price-Taking Firm (Fixed Proportions)
The logic underlying the firm’s demand for labor remains the same in the case of firms
experiencing fixed proportions technology; that is the firm will still hire that number of workers
that will maximize it’s profits, and that occurs when the marginal value product of labor is
greater than or equal to the wage rate. So long as the marginal value product of labor is greater
than or equal to the wage rate, the firm will have an incentive to produce at capacity. The
following graph depicts this situation. It’s assumed, for the sake of simplicity, that the marginal
value product is greater than the wage rate. But, the outcome shown in the graph would still be
the same, namely that the firm will hire the maximum amount it can, given its capacity (capital
structure), even if the marginal value product happened to coincide with the wage rate. However,
in this case the choice would have to be a short-term decision, since the firm would not be
covering any of its overhead or profits.
Price-Setting Firm (Fixed Proportions)
In the case of price setting firms, the profit-maximizing demand for labor will be
determined by the point at which the marginal revenue product of labor just matches the wage
Labor
w ,
M V
P, A
V P
p*mpL = p*apL
w
L1
24
rate. This remains true regardless of whether the firm experiences diminishing returns or fixed
proportions. The following graph illustrates one possible scenario, where the marginal revenue
product of labor meets the wage rate at some level of production that falls short of the firm’s
maximum level of ouptut. Of course, it’s also possible for the marginal revenue product of labor
to never match the wage rate, as would be the case if the demand for the product were very
strong, exceeding the firm’s capacity. In this case, the outcome would be the same as in the
previous case (the price-taking firm with a fixed proportions productive technology); that is the
firm would be induced to hire the maximum amount of labor, consistent with the firm’s capacity
(capital). Note that regardless of whether the marginal revenue product of labor matches the
wage rate (as in the graph) or remains above it, the average value product will always exceed the
wage rate.
Output and Substitution Effects
What if the wage rate were to change? In particular, what would happen to the quantity of
labor demanded, if the wage rate were to decrease? The neoclassical argument is that the firm
would hire more workers and begin to change its technology of production by employing more
labor-intensive techniques. Since the price of labor has fallen relative to capital, the firm would
eventually use a lower capital/labor ratio in the production of the output. The extent to which this
might be true depends on the extent to which labor can be substituted for capital. If the
technology of production is narrowly constrained so that only a specific amount of labor can be
Labor
w ,
M V
P, A
V P
mr*mpL = mr*apL
w
L1
p*mpL = p*apL
p*apL
w
25
employed with a specific amount of capital, then a reduction in the wage rate may not cause the
firm to substitute more labor-intensive techniques for the older capital-intensive ones. But if the
technology of production is quite flexible then it’s reasonable to imagine that the firm would
eventually substitute more labor for capital.
All of this can be explained by exploring the output and substitution effects of using labor
as a result of a reduction in the wages of labor. The following three graphs help explain this
process.
Labor
w ,
M V
P
MVP1
w1
L1
w2
L2 L3
MVP2
Labor
C ap it al
Q1 Q2
Kfiexed
w1/v
w2/v
L1 L2 L3
26
Much of this has already been explained in a previous section that explained the output
and substitution effects of a change in the relative price of labor with respect to capital. The basic
idea is that a reduction in the wages of labor will have two effects. The first thing that would
occur is the output effect. But over the long run, the substitution effect could also take hold.
The output effect refers to the idea that a change in the wage rate would have the effect of
changing the marginal cost of production that in turn can affect the amount produced and
consequently the amount of labor needed to produce that greater output. Let’s consider the case
of a wage reduction to see how this works. The wage reduction would have the effect of reducing
the marginal cost of production. In the case of price taking firms, the reduction in marginal cost
would have the effect of inducing the firm to produce a larger volume of output. This is depicted
in the third graph, showing the firm producing a larger volume of output as a result of the
reduction in marginal cost. It’s also depicted in the first graph as the movement from L1 to L2,
and in the second graph as the shift from Q1 to Q2 and consequently the growth in the use of
labor (with a fixed capital structure) from L1 to L2.
It should be noted that the output effect gets more complicated than suggested above. To
keep things simple we’re imagining that all that happens is that more is produced as a result of a
reduction in the wage rate. However, the extent to which this might occur, or indeed the
possibility that output could actually decrease, depends on a host of other factors we’ve left
untouched. A glimpse of this can be captured by noting that an increase in output (and
consequently supply), brought on by a reduction in the marginal cost of production, would be
expected to bring about a reduction in the price of the product. The extent of that price reduction
would depend on the price elasticity of market demand and supply. But regardless of the extent
of the price reduction, it should also be obvious that the price reduction would, in turn, have the
Output
D ol la rs
MC1
MC2
p
Q2Q1
27
effect of inducing the firm to produce a smaller volume of output, something less than Q2. We
have, of course, no way of knowing the extent of that quantity reduction; it would depend on the
magnitude of the price reduction. It’s possible that the quantity reduction forces the firm to
produce less than Q2 but still more than Q1. But it’s also possible that quantity is forced to fall
back to Q1 or even below that amount. To keep things simple we’ll assume that the output effect
is negative, meaning that a reduction in the wage rate brings about an increase in output and
consequently an increase in the usage of labor, as depicted in the above diagrams.
Now, in addition to the output effect, a change in the wage rate will also have the effect
of changing the relative price of labor in terms of capital and induce the firm to start searching
for productive techniques that use a different capital/labor ratio. This is called the substitution
effect. In this case, a reduction in the wage rate will have the effect of inducing the firm to pick a
lower capital/labor ratio, one that relies on more labor (since it’s now cheaper), and less capital
(since it’s now relatively more expensive). The shift to a lower capital to labor ratio is depicted
in the second diagram as the movement from L2 to L3 units of labor in the production of output
Q2. Note that the firm is still producing the same volume of output (namely Q2), but with a more
efficient combination of capital and labor. This same effect is depicted in the first diagram as a
movement from L2 to L3. In this case, the substitution effect is shown as a shift in the marginal
value product of labor.
It should be noted that an increase in the marginal value product of labor might seem
counterintuitive. Since the firm is now relying on less capital, why would the marginal product
of labor increase? It’s important to review the fact that a reduction in the relative price of labor in
terms of capital (i.e. the w/v ratio) will induce the firm to search for a lower capital/labor ratio or,
stated differently, a productive technique where the ratio of the marginal product of labor to the
marginal product of capital is lower. This last requirement would suggest that the marginal
product of labor should fall; yet as noted in the above graphs, the marginal product of labor is
shown to be increasing. The way to think about this is to keep in mind that it’s the ratio of the
marginal products that’s diminishing, not simply the marginal product of labor. Thus, this ratio
can be falling as a result of an increase in the marginal product of capital combined with an
increase in the marginal product of labor (but one where the increase in the marginal product of
capital is greater than the increase in the marginal product of labor). Both capital and labor are
now more productive at the margin, but capital is now slightly more productive than labor.
28
Monopsony
Up to now we’ve been assuming competitive labor markets. But we should explore the
more realistic case where firms have some price-setting ability within the labor market. The
extreme version of this is found in the case of a monopsonist, that is a firm that has monopoly
power in the purchasing of inputs, in this case in the hiring of labor. An understanding of the
case of monopsony provides us with insights into the more general case where firms are not
necessarily formal monosponists but nevertheless have varying degrees of power within the labor
market.
This graph depicts a monopsonist intent on hiring the profit-maximizing amount of labor.
The key to understanding this behavior is that the firm is forced to increase the wages it pays its
labor force every time it wishes to hire a bit more labor. This has the effect of causing the
marginal expense of hiring one more worker to increase at a faster pace than the wages that must
be paid to attract one more worker. The firm will pick that usage of labor that will insure that the
marginal revenue product of labor just matches marginal expense of labor. The firm will pick
that wage rate that brings this about.
The thing to note about this choice is that the monopsonist will always pay its labor force
less than what would be the case in a competitive market while, at the same time, hiring less
labor than would be the case in a competitive market.
Labor
S L ,M E L ,M R P L
MEL
SL
MRPL
Lc
wc
wm
Lm