Multiple Choice

A company wishes to hire 50 new employees and has ranked 100 potential candidates in ascending order of their utility from being unemployed (α₁ < α₂ < ... < α₁₀₀). To hire the first 50 candidates, the wage offered must provide a utility level at least equal to α₅₀. A manager suggests that to save costs, the company should instead offer a wage that provides a utility level equal to the average unemployment utility of the first 50 candidates. Why is this suggestion fundamentally flawed for achieving the goal of hiring 50 employees?

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Updated 2025-08-07

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