IRE244H1 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: North American Free Trade Agreement, Baby Boomers, Demand Curve

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A policy that applies to economy-wide goals, such as inflation, unemployment, and growth. The more competitive, the more elastic demand of labour is. Unions will tend to have more power when there is less competition in the fir(cid:373)"s produ(cid:272)t (cid:373)arket. The easier it is to substitute capital, the less power labour will have to raise wages. Long-term phenomenon technological change takes years to implement. Degree to which labour costs account for production costs. Low labour-intensity, higher bargaining power: wage i(cid:374)(cid:272)rease (cid:449)o(cid:374)t" ha(cid:448)e a huge i(cid:373)pa(cid:272)t o(cid:374) total (cid:272)osts. The cheaper and more available these substitutes, the greater the impact on employment (less bargaining power) Noneconomic sources of union power: power from other labour markets and local communities. Factors in society that determine labour supply: 1. Monopsony: occurs when a firm is the sole market buyer of a good, service, or labour: dominant in the labour market control over the wages.

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