The Employment Relationship: Difference between revisions
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====The employment relationship can be basically modeled as followed:==== | ====The employment relationship can be basically modeled as followed:==== | ||
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A company's production function is defined by the equation: | A company's production function is defined by the equation: | ||
:<big>''y''=''y(he)''+ε </big> | :<big>''y''=''y(he)''+ε </big> |
Revision as of 21:38, 22 April 2009
The employment relationship can be basically modeled as followed:
A company's production function is defined by the equation:
- y=y(he)+ε
- Assumptions:
- y' > 0
- y'' < 0
- h = # of hours worked (assuming 1 hour per worker)
- e ∈ [0,1] (Simply, e is the "effort" term and is equal to the amount per hour that a worker actually works)
- ε is an error term with μ=0
- Assumptions:
- Note that e, the effort exerted by the worker, is a function of the wage (w), the level of monitoring (m), and an exogenously determined
"next best alternative" we'll call z. Thus, e(w,m;z).
The game breaks down as follows:
- The employer seeks to maximize profit knowing that for a given wage rate (w), the employee will exert effort e.
- At the beginning of the game the employer selects:
- The wage (w) to be payed to the employee
- The level of monitoring (m)
- A termination probability defined by t ∈ [0,1] with te < 0 and tm >0
From this we can easily rearrange terms to get this: