Multiple Choice

An analyst is attempting to algebraically rearrange the planning horizon formula for the reservation wage into its weighted-average form. The goal is to express the reservation wage, (w_r), as a weighted average of the utility from unemployment and the utility from employment, using (\tau) as the proportion of time unemployed.

Below are the steps the analyst took:

Initial Formula: (w_r = \frac{j(b+a^M) + (h-j)v}{h}) Where:

  • (j) = expected weeks unemployed
  • (h) = total weeks in planning horizon
  • (b+a^M) = weekly utility while unemployed
  • (v) = weekly utility from the new job

Derivation Steps:

  1. Split the fraction: (w_r = \frac{j(b+a^M)}{h} + \frac{(h-j)v}{h})
  2. Isolate the time proportions: (w_r = \frac{j}{h}(b+a^M) + \frac{h-j}{h}v)
  3. Define the proportion of time unemployed as (\tau = j/h).
  4. Substitute (\tau) into the first term: (w_r = \tau(b+a^M) + \frac{h-j}{h}v)
  5. Substitute for the second term's weight: (w_r = \tau(b+a^M) + \tau v)

Which step contains the logical error that prevents the derivation from reaching the correct weighted-average form?

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Updated 2025-08-02

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