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Efficiency Wage Models of the Labor Market
 
 
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Efficiency Wage Models of the Labor Market [Paperback]

George A. Akerlof (Editor), Janet L. Yellen (Editor)

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Book Description

0521312841 978-0521312844 November 28, 1986
One of the more troubling aspects of the ferment in macroeconomics that followed the demise of the Keynesian dominance in the late 1960s has been the inability of many of the new ideas to account for unemployment remains unexplained because equilibrium in most economic models occurs with supply equal to demand: if this equality holds in the labor market, there is no involuntary unemployment. Efficiency Wage Models of the Labor Market explores the reasons why there are labor market equilibria with employers preferring to pay wages in excess of the market-clearing wage and thereby explains involuntary unemployment. This volume brings together a number of the important articles on efficiency wage theory. The collection is preceded by a strong, integrative introduction, written by the editors, in which the hypothesis is set out and the variations, as described in subsequent chapters, are discussed.

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Editorial Reviews

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Involuntary unemployment remains unexplained because equilibrium in most economic models occurs when supply equals demand. If this equality holds in the labor market, there is no involuntary unemployment. This text explores labor market equilibria wherein employers prefer to pay wages in excess of the market clearing wage. -- Book Description

Book Description

Efficiency Wage Models of the Labor Market explores the reasons why involuntary unemployment happens when supply equals demand. The contributors bring together a number of the important articles on efficiency wage theory and on the hypothesis on why they believe this happens.

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More About the Author

George A. Akerlof is the Koshland Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and 2001 Nobel Laureate in Economics. Akerlof is the coauthor, with Robert Shiller, of "Animal Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives the Economy, and Why It Matters for Global Capitalism".

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In the case where all of the land is owned by those who work it, there is no problem explaining the existence of surplus labor and the simultaneous fact that those who work the land do have a positive income. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
cash posters, average productivity curve, expected utility constraint, full employment revenue, certainty contract, nonindustrial sector, efficiency wage models, shirking model, acceptance wages, efficiency wage hypothesis, unemployment pool, marginal productivity curve, search unemployment, nonbattle casualties, wage stickiness, worker discipline device, involuntary unemployment, labor endowment, productive status, caught shirking, identical workers, disguised unemployment, productivity curves, observed effort, zero wage
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, American Economic Review, Eastern Utilities, Journal of Political Economy, Andrew Weiss, Edmund Phelps, Princeton University, Air Force, Another Possible Source of Wage Stickiness, Discussion Paper, Research Branch, United States, Brookings Papers, Harvard University Press, Hours Restrictions, Joseph Stiglitz, Review of Economic Studies, Robert Lucas, Stanford University, The Free Press
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