A Graduate's Decision with a Lower-than-Expected Wage Offer
This problem illustrates a job seeker's decision-making process when faced with an offer below their initial expectations. Françoise, who anticipates earning €700 per week, finds a job paying €580. Her decision to apply hinges on whether accepting this position would make her better off than her reservation option, which is to remain unemployed and continue searching for a higher-paying job.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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A Graduate's Decision with a Lower-than-Expected Wage Offer
A Parisian Language School's Short-Term Employment Model
A recent university graduate is looking for a job teaching her native language. Based on her qualifications and knowledge of the local job market, she has formed an expectation that she can find a position paying €700 per week. Which of the following factors is the most direct and economically relevant determinant of this specific expected wage?
Evaluating a Job Seeker's Wage Expectation
A recent graduate's expected wage for their first job is primarily determined by their personal financial needs, such as rent and student loan payments.
A recent graduate is forming an expectation of the wage they can earn. This process involves analyzing different types of information. Match each piece of information below to the role it plays in determining a realistic expected wage.
Analyzing the Formation of an Expected Wage
Consequences of Inaccurate Wage Expectations
A recent graduate, after researching the job market for teaching positions that match her qualifications, determines that she can reasonably expect to earn €700 per week. What is the primary economic function of this €700 figure during her job search?
A recent graduate is searching for a job. After researching salaries for similar roles and considering their own qualifications, they determine a specific weekly pay rate they believe they can achieve. This figure, which they will use as a benchmark to evaluate any offers they receive, is known as their __________ wage.
A recent graduate is starting their job search. Arrange the following actions into the logical sequence they would typically follow to establish and use an expected wage.
Adjusting Wage Expectations
A Graduate's Decision with a Lower-than-Expected Wage Offer
An unemployed software developer receives a job offer with a weekly salary of $1,500. While this salary is enough to cover their living expenses, it is less than they were hoping to earn. Based on the principle of comparing an offer to the next best alternative, which of the following is the most critical factor for the developer to consider when deciding whether to accept the job?
For an unemployed individual, the decision to accept a job offer should be based solely on whether the offered wage is greater than the income they receive while unemployed.
In an economy where all energy for labor (food) and industry (fuel) is derived from what can be grown, the ultimate physical constraint on economic growth is the finite availability of ____.
Job Offer Decision Analysis
Job Offer Decision Analysis
Deconstructing the Job Search Decision
Analyzing the 'Next Best Alternative' for a Jobseeker
An unemployed individual is evaluating a job offer. Match each element of their decision-making framework to its correct description.
An unemployed individual receives a job offer. Arrange the following steps into the logical sequence they would follow to decide whether to accept the offer, based on the principle of comparing it to their next best alternative.
Reservation Wage as the Indifference Point for Job Acceptance
An unemployed person receives a job offer. According to the decision-making framework where an offer is compared to the 'next best alternative,' which of the following statements most accurately breaks down the components that determine the value of this alternative (i.e., the value of remaining unemployed and continuing to search)?
A freelance graphic designer is offered a project that will pay $1,500 and take two weeks to complete. The designer's only other work opportunity for that same two-week period is a series of smaller tasks for a regular client that would pay a total of $1,200. The designer finds the $1,500 project more interesting and decides to accept it. Based on this information, what is the designer's reservation option?
Identifying the Reservation Option
Analyzing a Choice with a Reservation Option
A company is considering upgrading its software system. The new system costs $50,000 but is projected to increase annual profits by $20,000. The company's other options are to continue using the current system, which has no new costs but also no new profit, or to switch to a different, cheaper software that costs $10,000 and is projected to increase annual profits by $12,000. The company decides to purchase the new $50,000 system. Based on this information, the company's reservation option is to continue using the current system.
Calculating the Value of a Reservation Option
An individual is deciding between three mutually exclusive options for the summer:
- A full-time internship that pays a total of $5,000.
- Working a local job that pays a total of $4,000.
- Taking an unpaid research position that offers valuable experience but no income.
The individual determines that the internship is their best option and the local job is their second-best option. If the pay for the local job suddenly increases to $5,500, how does this change affect the economic evaluation of the individual's choice?
A student is deciding how to spend their spring break. They have several options:
- Go on a trip to Florida with friends, which they value the most. The trip costs $800.
- Work a temporary job earning $600. They consider this their second-best option.
- Stay home and study for exams, which they consider their third-best option.
The student chooses to go on the trip to Florida. Match each element of the scenario to its correct economic description.
Critiquing a Business Decision
Analyzing Economic Surplus
Strategic Business Relocation
A Graduate's Decision with a Lower-than-Expected Wage Offer
Reservation Wage as the Indifference Point for Job Acceptance