No one hires a steelworker because they want steel for its own sake — they hire steelworkers because they want bridges, cars, and buildings. When the housing market booms, demand for construction workers surges — not because workers became more productive, but because demand for the product they build increased. When car sales slump, automaker layoffs follow — not because workers got worse at making cars, but because the demand for cars that made their labor valuable evaporated. Labor demand is always derived from something else.
In plain terms
Derived demand is the demand for a factor of production (labor, capital, raw materials) that arises because of demand for the final good or service the factor is used to produce. The factor is not valued in itself — it is valued for its contribution to output that consumers want.
The chain of causation runs from consumer demand backward through the production process:
Consumer demand for smartphones → Demand for smartphone assembly workers → Demand for rare earth elements used in batteries
Each link in the production chain derives its demand from the link above it — ultimately from the final consumer.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics Employment Situation documents how industry employment tracks closely with industry output — construction employment rises and falls with housing starts; manufacturing employment moves with factory orders. These are derived demand relationships playing out in employment data.
Why it works this way
The demand curve for a factor of production is the Marginal Revenue Product (MRP) curve — which equals MPL × MR. Both components link the factor's demand to the product market:
- MPL (physical contribution): the factor's productivity in producing output
- MR (revenue from output): how much that output is worth to consumers
If consumer demand for a product falls, MR (or P in competitive markets) falls, which reduces MRP and shifts the labor demand curve leftward — even if workers' physical productivity is unchanged.
A real example
The rise of streaming video derived demand for a specific skill set: video engineers, content producers, and post-production specialists. The Bureau of Labor Statistics occupational projections show rapid growth in these roles — not because labor market forces suddenly made video production workers scarce, but because consumer demand for streaming content created derived demand for the labor that makes it.
Conversely, newspaper circulation declines derived away demand for press operators and advertising layout specialists — jobs eliminated not by any change in the workers' skills but by the collapse of consumer demand for the product they produced.
Why it matters
Derived demand explains why labor market conditions often cannot be understood by looking at the labor market alone. A policy that improves worker skills may fail to raise employment if demand for the product those skills produce is declining. A minimum wage increase may have limited employment effects if product demand is inelastic and employers can pass cost through to consumers. Understanding that labor markets are downstream of product markets is essential for accurate labor market forecasting and policy analysis.





