A furniture company's only production cost is the wages paid to its carpenters. The company has established that each carpenter, on average, builds two chairs per day. If the company decides to increase the daily wage for all carpenters by 8%, what will be the resulting change in the company's average cost to produce one chair?
0
1
Tags
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.1 The supply side of the macroeconomy: Unemployment and real wages - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Application in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Definition of Average Cost
A manufacturing firm's only cost of production is the wages it pays its employees. The firm gives all its workers a 10% raise. After the raise, the firm calculates that its cost per unit of output has only increased by 6%. Which of the following statements provides the best explanation for this outcome?
Analyzing Production Costs
A furniture company's only production cost is the wages paid to its carpenters. The company has established that each carpenter, on average, builds two chairs per day. If the company decides to increase the daily wage for all carpenters by 8%, what will be the resulting change in the company's average cost to produce one chair?
Consider a company where employee wages are the only production expense. If this company increases wages for all its workers by 5%, its average cost per unit of output will necessarily also increase by exactly 5%.
Wage Increases and Production Costs
Evaluating Competing Cost-Reduction Arguments
A company's only production cost is the wages it pays its workers. Match each scenario describing a change in wages and worker output with the correct resulting change in the company's average cost per unit.
Analyzing Simultaneous Changes in Wages and Worker Output
Evaluating a Simplified Cost Model
A company's only production cost is the wage it pays its workers, and each worker produces a fixed number of units per hour. The manager, concerned about rising costs, states: 'To lower our average cost per unit, we should hire more workers. This will spread our total labor costs over a larger workforce.' Why is the manager's reasoning flawed within this specific production framework?
Average Cost in the Price-Setting Model