◆ ARTICLES

The library

414 articles across Financial Literacy and Economic Intelligence — shuffled fresh each visit.

19 articles · page 1 of 2
◆ Spotlight
LABOR ECONOMICS

Labor Unions: Collective Bargaining Power in the Wage-Setting Process

A labor union is a collective organization of workers that bargains with employers over wages, benefits, and working conditions.

  • A labor union negotiates collectively on behalf of workers, converting individual wage-taking into group wage-setting power
  • Unions raise wages for members — the union wage premium is typically 10–20 percent in research controlling for worker and firm characteristics
  • Union density has declined sharply in the U.S. private sector since the 1950s — from roughly 35 percent to under 7 percent — while public-sector unionization remains at about 33 percent
3 min read · April 10, 2026Read the breakdown →
LABOR ECONOMICS

Wage Differentials, by the Numbers: Why Pay Varies So Dramatically Across Jobs

Median pay runs from about $30,000 to over $200,000 across occupations. The BLS numbers reveal why — skill, scarcity, and the differentials that price danger.

6 min read·April 22, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

Marginal Revenue Product: What One More Worker Is Actually Worth

The marginal revenue product of labor is the additional revenue generated by hiring one more worker.

2 min read·April 3, 2026
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INCOME & INEQUALITY

What Drives Income Inequality? The Economics Behind the Gap

The top 1% earned 12.4% of all U.S. wages in 2023, up from 7.3% in 1979. Here are the five forces actually driving the gap — led by the data.

9 min read·June 6, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

Human Capital: The Economic Value of Skills, Education, and Experience

Human capital is the stock of skills, knowledge, and experience embodied in workers that increases their productivity.

3 min read·April 5, 2026
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THE FIRM & PRODUCTION

Marginal Product of Labor: The Numbers Behind Every Hiring Decision

Marginal product of labor is the extra output from one more worker. Here is the math that tells a firm exactly when to hire, when to stop, and what a worker…

6 min read·March 18, 2026
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INFORMATION ECONOMICS

Signaling and Screening: How Markets Handle Hidden Information

Signaling is when an informed party communicates their type to an uninformed party. Screening is when the uninformed party designs mechanisms to reveal the…

3 min read·May 5, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

Minimum Wage and Unions: What the Economics of Labor Market Intervention Actually Says

The minimum wage and unions both intervene in the labor market. The economics is more contested than either side admits — what the evidence and CBO show.

7 min read·April 24, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

How Labor Markets Work: Supply, Demand, and the Price of Human Time

A labor market is supply and demand applied to human time. How wages, hours, and jobs get set — and why the textbook curves bend in the real world.

8 min read·April 19, 2026
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INTERNATIONAL TRADE

Trade Policy, Jobs, and the Political Economy of Protection

If economists agree trade grows the pie, why is protection so popular? Gains are spread thin, losses concentrated — and politics rewards the loud.

7 min read·June 2, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

What Determines Your Wage: Productivity, Scarcity, and the MRP Framework

Your wage is not set by what you need or deserve. It tracks marginal revenue product — what one more hour of work adds to employer revenue. Here is the math.

7 min read·April 20, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

Human Capital: The Framework That Treats Skills and Education as Investment

Human capital is the idea that your skills and knowledge are an asset you invest in — with costs, returns, and depreciation. Treat your career as a portfolio.

7 min read·April 21, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

Wage Discrimination: When Pay Differs for Reasons Unrelated to Productivity

Wage discrimination occurs when workers with equal productivity receive different pay based on characteristics unrelated to job performance — most studied…

3 min read·April 7, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

Monopsony: When One Buyer Controls the Labor Market

Monopsony is a market with a single buyer of labor — or more broadly, a situation where employers have enough wage-setting power to pay workers less than…

3 min read·April 8, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

Minimum Wage: The Wage Floor and Its Effects

The minimum wage is a legally mandated floor on wages that employers must pay workers. It protects workers from poverty wages but may reduce employment in…

3 min read·April 11, 2026
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LABOR ECONOMICS

Compensating Differential: The Wage Premium for Bad Jobs

A compensating differential is the wage premium paid to attract workers to jobs with undesirable characteristics — danger, discomfort, irregular hours, or…

3 min read·April 6, 2026
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THE FIRM & PRODUCTION

Marginal and Average Product: How Much Does One More Worker Add?

Marginal product is the additional output from one more unit of an input. Average product is output per unit of input.

3 min read·February 21, 2026
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