A company wants to determine how many workers it can hire at various wage levels. To do this, it identifies all potential employees in the labor pool and their individual minimum acceptable wage. How should the company sequence these potential employees to construct a graph that correctly shows an upward-sloping relationship between the wage offered and the cumulative number of workers willing to accept a job?
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Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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The Reservation Wage Curve Equation (Utility-Based)
Individual Unemployment Utility of the Nth Potential Worker (α_N)
A company wants to determine how many workers it can hire at various wage levels. To do this, it identifies all potential employees in the labor pool and their individual minimum acceptable wage. How should the company sequence these potential employees to construct a graph that correctly shows an upward-sloping relationship between the wage offered and the cumulative number of workers willing to accept a job?
A small consulting firm is looking to hire up to four junior analysts. They have identified four potential candidates, each with a different minimum acceptable annual salary (their reservation wage). To construct a curve showing how many analysts they can hire at different salary levels, arrange the candidates in the sequence they would become available for hire as the offered salary is gradually increased from lowest to highest.
Hiring Strategy for a Local Bakery
A firm is creating a graph to show how many workers it can hire at different wage levels. To do this, it should arrange all potential employees in descending order of their minimum acceptable wage (from highest to lowest). This approach is correct because it ensures the firm first considers the workers who value their labor the most.
Rationale for Constructing a Firm's Labor Supply Curve
A local coffee shop has identified four potential baristas and their minimum acceptable hourly wage (reservation wage):
- Alex: $14/hour
- Ben: $20/hour
- Chloe: $17/hour
- David: $15/hour
Based on this information, match each potential wage offer in the left column to the total number of candidates who would be willing to accept that job offer in the right column.
Constructing and Applying a Firm-Specific Labor Supply Curve
A company creates a list of all potential job candidates, arranging them from the person who would accept the lowest wage to the person who would accept the highest. If this list is used to create a graph with the wage on the vertical axis and the cumulative number of candidates on the horizontal axis, what does the wage level associated with the 20th candidate on the list signify?
A human resources manager wants to visualize the company's potential labor supply. They collect the minimum acceptable wage from 50 job applicants. Instead of ordering the applicants, they create a graph by taking each applicant in a random sequence and plotting a point corresponding to their specific minimum wage against their number in the sequence (1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.). What is the most likely outcome of this process?
A consulting firm and a local coffee shop both construct a graph to visualize their potential labor supply. They plot the wage offered on the vertical axis and the cumulative number of willing applicants on the horizontal axis. The consulting firm's graph shows a steeply rising line, while the coffee shop's graph shows a much flatter, gently rising line. Which of the following statements provides the best interpretation of this difference?