A factory owner in 1820s Britain argues against raising wages for his workers, despite his factory's output having doubled due to new machinery. He claims, 'If I raise wages, I will have less money to reinvest in even more advanced machines, which will ultimately harm the long-term prosperity of both the factory and its workers.' Which of the following statements provides the most accurate evaluation of the factory owner's argument in the context of that historical period?
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Productivity, Profits, and Labor Shift
Flowchart of Technological Improvement's Economic Effects
Dual Impact of Technology on the Labor Market
Figure 2.18: Visualizing the Lag Between Productivity and Wage Growth
Imagine a historical scenario where a nation's factories adopt new steam-powered machinery, causing the average factory worker's daily output to triple over a 30-year period. However, economic data from the same period shows that the average real daily wage for these workers barely changed. Which of the following statements provides the most likely explanation for this discrepancy?
Productivity and Wages in an 1820s Textile Mill
Arrange the following economic events, characteristic of the early Industrial Revolution, into the correct chronological sequence to illustrate the relationship between technology, productivity, and wages.
The Great Divergence: Productivity vs. Wages
Explaining the Wage-Productivity Gap
True or False: The primary reason real wages remained stagnant for workers during the initial decades of rapid technological progress and rising output per worker was that the new technologies were not yet efficient enough to generate substantial new wealth for the economy as a whole.
Match each economic phenomenon from the early industrial era with its correct description to illustrate the relationship between production, technology, and worker compensation.
During the early decades of industrialization, a significant gap emerged between rising output per worker and stagnant real wages. This occurred because the economic gains from new technologies were not proportionally distributed, largely due to the workforce's limited ____ to negotiate for better compensation.
A factory owner in 1820s Britain argues against raising wages for his workers, despite his factory's output having doubled due to new machinery. He claims, 'If I raise wages, I will have less money to reinvest in even more advanced machines, which will ultimately harm the long-term prosperity of both the factory and its workers.' Which of the following statements provides the most accurate evaluation of the factory owner's argument in the context of that historical period?
Consider two historical economic scenarios:
- Scenario 1 (1780-1830): The introduction of steam-powered looms dramatically increases the output of cloth per textile worker. The workforce is largely unorganized, with few legal rights to negotiate wages or working conditions.
- Scenario 2 (Hypothetical): A modern-day software company develops an AI tool that doubles the productivity of its programmers. The programmers are all members of a powerful union that negotiates their contracts collectively.
Based on an understanding of the relationship between output, technology, and worker compensation, which of the following outcomes is most likely?