Activity: Analyze the Household's Choice with Gender Discrimination using Figure 3.22
This activity involves a guided analysis of Figure 3.22 to understand the consequences of the gender discrimination scenario. The task is to examine the changes in the feasible set and determine how they affect the household's ultimate decision on labor and consumption.
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CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Activity: Analyze the Household's Choice with Gender Discrimination using Figure 3.22
Feasible Frontier Segment where Only Luis Works (Figure 3.22)
Feasible Frontier Segment where Both Ana and Luis Work (Figure 3.22)
The Household's New Optimal Choice under Discrimination (Point D in Figure 3.22)
Representation of the Original Optimal Choice (Point B) in Figure 3.22
Unattainable Segment of the Original Feasible Frontier (Figure 3.22)
Learn After
A two-person household makes a joint decision about how many hours each person works to maximize their combined consumption. Initially, they face a set of possible consumption levels represented by the feasible frontier FF1 and choose an optimal point A. Subsequently, one of the two individuals experiences a significant wage cut, reducing their earnings for every hour worked. This event shifts the household's feasible frontier inward to a new, smaller set, FF2. Given this change, what is the most likely consequence for the household's new optimal choice?
Household Decision-Making Under New Constraints
Impact of a Selective Wage Reduction on Household Choices
Analyzing Changes to a Household's Feasible Set
A two-person household makes joint decisions to maximize their utility from consumption and leisure. If one person's wage is cut while the other's wage remains constant, it is guaranteed that the household's new optimal choice will involve a lower total level of consumption.
A two-person household makes joint decisions about work and consumption. Consider a scenario where one person's wage is cut, while the other's remains the same. Match each economic concept below to its correct description within this context.
Optimizing Household Choices Under a New Wage Structure
Conflicting Pressures in Household Labor Allocation
In a two-person household model, if one person's wage is cut while the other's remains the same, the household's overall potential income for any given number of work hours is reduced. If the household aims to maintain its original level of consumption, it must increase its total ____.
Evaluating a Strategy for Household Labor Allocation