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A powerful landowner can determine the work hours and compensation for a farmer under two different institutional arrangements. In the first arrangement, the farmer is coerced and has no alternative but to work for the landowner, whose only constraint is providing enough for the farmer's biological survival. In the second arrangement, the farmer is free to reject the offer and has an alternative that provides a higher level of well-being than mere survival. From the landowner's perspective, which statement best analyzes why the first arrangement allows for a potentially larger economic surplus for the landowner?
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Landowner's Strategy Under Changing Conditions
A landowner makes an offer of work and pay to a farmer. Initially, the farmer has no alternative and must accept any offer that provides at least a biological subsistence level of food. Later, a new government program guarantees the farmer a basic income, providing a higher level of well-being than mere subsistence, even if the farmer chooses not to work. How does this new program fundamentally change the primary constraint on the landowner's offer?
A landowner can interact with a farmer under two different institutional settings. Match each setting with the description that best characterizes the primary constraint on the landowner's offer and the nature of the payment to the farmer.
Comparing Constraints on a Landowner's Offer
A landowner's offer to a farmer is always constrained by the farmer's biological survival frontier, regardless of whether the farmer is coerced or has the freedom to reject the offer.
Analysis of Surplus Distribution in Different Institutional Settings
A landowner initially offers a farmer a take-it-or-leave-it contract that provides just enough food for the farmer to survive in exchange for long hours of work. Later, due to a change in local laws, the farmer gains the freedom to reject the landowner's offers and has access to a small plot of government-provided land that guarantees a basic, above-subsistence living. Which of the following best explains why the landowner's subsequent offer to the farmer would likely involve fewer work hours and/or more pay?
A landowner is deciding on the terms of a work agreement with a farmer. In one scenario (Scenario A), the farmer is coerced and must accept whatever the landowner provides, as long as it is enough to keep her alive and working. In a second scenario (Scenario B), the farmer is free to reject the offer and can secure a modest but stable living on her own.
Which of the following statements most accurately analyzes the fundamental difference in the landowner's calculation when determining the farmer's compensation in these two scenarios?
A powerful landowner can determine the work hours and compensation for a farmer under two different institutional arrangements. In the first arrangement, the farmer is coerced and has no alternative but to work for the landowner, whose only constraint is providing enough for the farmer's biological survival. In the second arrangement, the farmer is free to reject the offer and has an alternative that provides a higher level of well-being than mere survival. From the landowner's perspective, which statement best analyzes why the first arrangement allows for a potentially larger economic surplus for the landowner?
A landowner can determine the work hours and compensation for a farmer under two different scenarios. In Scenario A, the farmer has no alternative and must accept any offer that provides at least a biological subsistence level of food. In Scenario B, the farmer has a viable outside option that provides a higher level of well-being than mere subsistence and is free to reject the landowner's offer. In which scenario does the total productivity of the farmer's labor (i.e., the total amount of grain produced) have a more direct and significant influence on the compensation the landowner must offer, and why?