A government policy that increases the overall tax rate on economic output will cause the real wage that firms can offer to fall. This adjustment ultimately results in a new labor market equilibrium characterized by a lower rate of structural unemployment.
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Figure 2.20: The Effect of a Rise in Tax Rates on Wages and Employment
A government enacts a new, higher tax on all goods and services. Assuming no change in the level of market competition or labor productivity, which statement best analyzes the resulting impact on the equilibrium level of structural unemployment?
Analyzing the Labor Market Impact of Taxation
Labor Market Impact of a New Consumption Tax
A government introduces a higher tax on corporate profits. Arrange the following events in the correct chronological order to show the resulting impact on the labor market equilibrium.
A government policy that increases the overall tax rate on economic output will cause the real wage that firms can offer to fall. This adjustment ultimately results in a new labor market equilibrium characterized by a lower rate of structural unemployment.
Analyzing the Impact of Taxation on Labor Market Equilibrium
A government significantly increases the tax rate on all economic output. Assuming no other changes in the economy, match each of the following labor market components to its resulting outcome in the new long-run equilibrium.
When a government imposes a higher tax rate on output, the price-setting curve shifts downward. This results in a new labor market equilibrium where the real wage is lower and the level of employment is ______.
Two policymakers are debating the long-run labor market effects of a proposed increase in the general tax rate on output.
- Policymaker A argues: 'This tax increase is harmful. It reduces the real wage that firms can profitably offer at any level of employment, leading to a new equilibrium with a permanently higher rate of unemployment.'
- Policymaker B argues: 'This tax increase will have no long-run effect on unemployment. While firms may initially pay a lower real wage, workers will eventually adjust their wage demands downward to protect jobs, restoring the original level of employment.'
Based on a standard labor market model where an upward-sloping wage-setting curve intersects a horizontal price-setting curve to determine equilibrium, which policymaker's analysis is correct and why?
Analyzing Labor Market Changes in Econland