A company plots a curve showing the relationship between an offered hourly wage (on the vertical axis) and the cumulative number of people willing to accept that wage (on thehorizontal axis). If the point (100 workers, $22/hour) lies on this curve, it signifies that each of the 100 workers has a minimum acceptable wage of exactly $22/hour.
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CORE Econ
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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A firm's hiring analyst plots a curve showing the relationship between a potential hourly wage and the number of job applicants willing to accept it. The curve indicates that if the firm offers $18 per hour, a total of 60 people are willing to work. If the firm raises the potential offer to $22 per hour, the total number of people willing to work increases to 95. Based on this information, what can you infer about the 35 additional people who become willing to work when the wage is raised from $18 to $22?
A company plots a curve showing the relationship between an offered hourly wage (on the vertical axis) and the cumulative number of people willing to accept that wage (on thehorizontal axis). If the point (100 workers, $22/hour) lies on this curve, it signifies that each of the 100 workers has a minimum acceptable wage of exactly $22/hour.
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A firm's analyst plots a curve where the vertical axis shows an hourly wage and the horizontal axis shows the cumulative number of people willing to work at or below that wage. A specific point on this curve is (50 employees, $20/hour). Match each concept below to its correct interpretation based on this point.
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A firm's reservation wage curve indicates that at a potential wage of $30 per hour, a total of 200 people are willing to be employed. This signifies that for each of these 200 individuals, their personal reservation wage is __________ $30 per hour.
An economic consulting firm is analyzing the labor supply for administrative assistants in two different cities, City A and City B. For each city, they plot a curve with the hourly wage on the vertical axis and the total number of individuals willing to work at or below that wage on the horizontal axis.
- Curve A (for City A): Starts at a low wage and rises steeply. A small increase in the wage leads to a large increase in the number of people willing to work.
- Curve B (for City B): Starts at a higher wage than Curve A and rises much more gradually. A large increase in the wage is needed to attract a similarly large number of additional workers.
Based on the shapes of these two curves, what is the most logical conclusion about the labor markets in these two cities?
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