Learn Before
The Need for an Economy-Wide Model for Labor Market Analysis
A government is considering several policies that will affect the labor market. For each policy described, match it with the most likely economy-wide feedback effect that would be missed if an analyst only studied the policy's direct impact on a single, representative firm.
0
1
Tags
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.2 Unemployment, wages, and inequality: Supply-side policies and institutions - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Role and Limitations of Macroeconomic Models in Policy Evaluation
Evaluating a Labor Policy Recommendation
An economic analyst studies a single, large manufacturing firm that has just automated a significant portion of its production line, leading to layoffs. The analyst concludes that this firm's action will have a negligible impact on the national unemployment rate for manufacturing workers. What is the most significant flaw in this analyst's reasoning?
Limitations of Single-Firm Labor Market Analysis
Evaluating a Policy Argument on Unemployment Benefits
When a major technology company opens a new headquarters and hires 10,000 employees in a mid-sized city, an analyst can accurately predict the total impact on the city's employment by focusing solely on these 10,000 new jobs. This focused approach is valid because it isolates the primary, direct effect of the company's decision.
A government implements a policy that provides large subsidies to all renewable energy companies, causing them to significantly increase their hiring of engineers. If an economist were to analyze the impact of this policy on the entire engineering labor market, which of the following would be the most crucial secondary effect to consider, beyond the direct hiring by renewable energy firms?
An economist wants to predict the total employment effect of a national increase in the minimum wage. The proposed method is to survey a large, representative sample of individual businesses, ask each how it plans to adjust its workforce, and then scale up the average response to the national level. Which statement best explains why this approach is fundamentally flawed for creating an accurate economy-wide forecast?
A government is considering several policies that will affect the labor market. For each policy described, match it with the most likely economy-wide feedback effect that would be missed if an analyst only studied the policy's direct impact on a single, representative firm.
Critiquing an Economic Impact Study
Tracing Economic Ripples