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A landowner makes a take-it-or-leave-it offer to a worker to maximize their own profit. The worker will only accept an offer that provides a minimum level of well-being. Match each component of this economic model to its correct description.
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A landowner, who seeks to maximize profit, makes a take-it-or-leave-it offer to a worker. The worker has an outside option and will only accept an offer that provides at least the same level of utility. The combinations of the worker's free time and total output are represented by a feasible frontier. Which of the following descriptions best characterizes the profit-maximizing allocation for the landowner?
A landowner wants to maximize the grain they receive from a tenant farmer, who will only accept an offer that meets a minimum level of well-being. At the current proposed allocation of work and grain, the rate at which the farmer is willing to trade an hour of free time for grain is 2 bushels. However, the technology available allows an extra hour of work to produce 3 bushels of grain.
Statement: The landowner is currently maximizing their share of the grain.
Profit Maximization in Contract Negotiation
Optimality in a Take-It-Or-Leave-It Offer
A landowner makes a take-it-or-leave-it offer to a farmer. The relationship between the farmer's free time and grain output is defined by a feasible production frontier. The farmer will only accept an offer that provides at least as much well-being as their outside option, which is represented by their reservation indifference curve. Consider four possible allocations (A, B, C, D), all of which are on the feasible frontier.
- At Allocation A, the feasible frontier intersects the farmer's reservation indifference curve.
- At Allocation B, the feasible frontier is tangent to the farmer's reservation indifference curve.
- At Allocation C, the feasible frontier is tangent to an indifference curve that provides the farmer with more well-being than their reservation level.
- At Allocation D, the allocation lies on the feasible frontier but below the farmer's reservation indifference curve.
Which allocation maximizes the landowner's profit?
Economic Rationale for the Optimal Contract
A landowner makes a take-it-or-leave-it offer to a worker to maximize their own profit. The worker will only accept an offer that provides a minimum level of well-being. Match each component of this economic model to its correct description.
A landowner makes a take-it-or-leave-it offer to a farmer. The farmer will only accept an offer that is at least as good as their next best alternative. At a specific proposed allocation, the farmer would have 16 hours of free time. At this point, the rate at which the farmer is willing to substitute free time for grain is equal to the rate at which free time can be technically transformed into grain. Which of the following statements is true about this allocation?
Evaluating a Sub-Optimal Contract
Evaluating a Profit-Maximizing Labor Contract
Optimality in a Take-It-Or-Leave-It Offer