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Summary CORE Economy Chapter 6 - The Firm: Owners, Managers, and Employees $3.90   Add to cart

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Summary CORE Economy Chapter 6 - The Firm: Owners, Managers, and Employees

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This Chapter looks at the labour discipline model in analysing how much effort workers are willing to provide to the company, while seeing why theses values may differ.

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  • Chapter 6
  • February 4, 2019
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  • 2018/2019
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By: devnahar8 • 5 year ago

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Chapter 6

Work and the Employer-Employee Relatonnhhp

 Work is an important part of economics.
 In models of economic interactonss bargaining determines the division of social surplus.
 All partes gain from these interactonss but have confictng interests over how these gains
are shared.

A Labour Model relatng Efort and Wagen

 Analyse how frms difer from markets.
 Use a model of interactons within the frm to explain how wages are determineds and how
this infuences unemployment.
 Explore the problem of incomplete contracts and hidden actons.

What hn a firm?

 Firm = a business organisaton which
o Employs people
o Purchases inputs to produce market goods and services
o Sets prices greater than the cost of producton
 “The frm in a capitalist economy is a miniature privately owneds centrally planned
economy.”

Fhrmn vn Marketn

 In a capitalist economys the division of labour is coordinated in two ways: frms and markets.
 Coordinaton within frm difers from coordinaton via markets:
o Concentraton of economic power in the hands of the owners/ managers allows
them to issue commands to workers.
o Power is decentralised in marketss so decisions are autonomous and voluntary.

Structure of a firm

 Owners decide on long term strategy
 Managers implement their decisions by assigning tasks to workers and monitoring them
 There is asymmetric informaton between board of directors and managers and workers. As
well as a confict of interest.

Contractn

 Firms and markets difer in the contracts that form the basis of exchange.
 Contract = a legal document or understanding that partes to the contract must undertake.
o Contracts for products sold in markets permanently transfer ownership of the good
from the seller to the buyer.
o Contracts for labour temporarily transfer authority over a person’s actvites from
the employee to the manager or owner.

Relatonnhhpn whthhn a firm

 Unlike in marketss relatonships within a frm may extend over a long period of tme.
o Creaton of network of colleagues

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