A landowner makes an initial contract offer to a farmer: 11 hours of work for 4.5 bushels of grain. This allocation is known to be inefficient. The farmer considers making a counter-offer for an efficient 8-hour workday. Analyze the following potential outcomes of the negotiation and match each one to its correct economic description.
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Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Figure 5.19 - Visualizing Negotiation Scenarios
Case 3: A Negotiated Win-Win Outcome at (16, 32)
Analyzing a Mutually Beneficial Contract Negotiation
An employer makes an initial contract offer to a worker. This initial allocation of work hours and pay is not on the Pareto efficiency curve, meaning it is possible to make at least one person better off without making the other worse off. The worker is considering a counter-offer. For this counter-offer to represent a mutually beneficial agreement (a Pareto improvement) that the employer would accept, which of the following must be true?
In a negotiation between two parties starting from a Pareto-inefficient allocation, any counter-offer that results in a new, Pareto-efficient allocation will automatically be a mutually beneficial agreement (a Pareto improvement) for both.
The Opportunity in Inefficiency
The Opportunity in Inefficiency
An employer and a worker are negotiating a contract. Their initial proposed agreement is inefficient, meaning there's an opportunity for a mutually beneficial deal. Arrange the following steps in the logical order that describes how they can reach a 'win-win' outcome, also known as a Pareto improvement.
A landowner makes an initial contract offer to a farmer: 11 hours of work for 4.5 bushels of grain. This allocation is known to be inefficient. The farmer considers making a counter-offer for an efficient 8-hour workday. Analyze the following potential outcomes of the negotiation and match each one to its correct economic description.
A firm manager proposes a contract to an employee: work 10 hours per day for a wage of $150. This initial arrangement is economically inefficient. At this allocation, the employee's satisfaction level is 70 units, and the firm's profit is $100. The employee realizes that working 8 hours per day would be the most efficient arrangement, maximizing the total combined value for both parties. The employee decides to make a counter-offer for an 8-hour workday. Which of the following counter-offers represents a mutually beneficial agreement (a Pareto improvement) over the initial proposal?
The Strategy of a Mutually Beneficial Counter-Offer
A company offers a freelance designer a contract for a project requiring 100 hours of work for a payment of $4,000. Under this arrangement, the designer's net satisfaction is valued at 500 units, and the company's net profit is $2,000. Both parties agree that the project's total value would be maximized if the designer worked for 80 hours instead. The designer plans to make a counter-offer for an 80-hour work schedule. Which of the following potential outcomes of this counter-offer would represent a mutually beneficial agreement (a Pareto improvement) over the initial offer?