A monopolistic firm makes a single, non-negotiable 'take-it-or-leave-it' contract offer to a potential supplier. The firm's goal is to maximize its own profit. The supplier has a 'reservation indifference curve' which represents all contract combinations that are equally as good as their next best alternative. Match each type of offer the firm could make with its most likely outcome.
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A landowner makes a single, non-negotiable 'take-it-or-leave-it' wage offer to a potential worker. The landowner knows the exact combinations of work hours and pay that would make the worker indifferent to their next best alternative (their 'reservation' option). To maximize their own profit, why would the landowner propose a contract that gives the worker exactly this minimum level of satisfaction, and no more?
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A powerful landowner is making a single, non-negotiable 'take-it-or-leave-it' offer to a farm worker. To maximize profit, the landowner should propose a contract that makes the worker slightly better off than their next best alternative. This ensures the worker will enthusiastically accept the offer, securing the deal for the landowner.
A monopolistic firm makes a single, non-negotiable 'take-it-or-leave-it' contract offer to a potential supplier. The firm's goal is to maximize its own profit. The supplier has a 'reservation indifference curve' which represents all contract combinations that are equally as good as their next best alternative. Match each type of offer the firm could make with its most likely outcome.
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A firm with exclusive bargaining power is making a single, non-negotiable ('take-it-or-leave-it') offer to a worker. The graph below shows the worker's reservation indifference curve (the combinations of wages and free time that are equally as good as the worker's next best alternative), several of the firm's isoprofit curves (combinations that yield the same profit), and the feasible frontier. The firm's profit increases as it moves to isoprofit curves that are lower and to the right. Given that the firm's goal is to maximize its profit, and the worker will accept any offer on or above their reservation indifference curve, which point represents the offer the firm will make?
[Image showing a graph with 'Daily Free Time' on the x-axis and 'Daily Pay' on the y-axis. The graph includes a downward-sloping feasible frontier, a convex reservation indifference curve, and several concave isoprofit curves. Four points are labeled: Point A is where an isoprofit curve is tangent to the reservation indifference curve. Point B is below the reservation indifference curve. Point C is on a higher indifference curve for the worker but also on a lower-profit isoprofit curve for the firm. Point D is on the reservation indifference curve but is not the point of tangency with an isoprofit curve.]
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