An architect receives a permanent $20 per hour raise. In a different city, a graphic designer with the same initial income and work hours inherits a sum of money that provides a guaranteed, lifelong annual payment equivalent to what the architect gained from the raise. Assuming leisure is a normal good for both, which statement best contrasts the likely effects on their decisions to work?
0
1
Tags
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Analyzing Work-Leisure Choices
An architect receives a permanent $20 per hour raise. In a different city, a graphic designer with the same initial income and work hours inherits a sum of money that provides a guaranteed, lifelong annual payment equivalent to what the architect gained from the raise. Assuming leisure is a normal good for both, which statement best contrasts the likely effects on their decisions to work?
An independent farmer is choosing their optimal combination of daily free time and bushels of grain produced. They are currently at a point on their feasible production frontier where their personal, subjective value of an additional bushel of grain (in terms of free time they are willing to sacrifice) is greater than the actual amount of free time they must sacrifice to produce that additional bushel. To improve their overall well-being, what should this farmer do?
A government is considering two policies to boost the income of low-wage workers. Policy A is a lump-sum cash grant. Policy B is an hourly wage subsidy. Both policies are designed to provide the same total increase in income to a worker who continues to work their original hours. A government advisor claims that since both policies provide the same income boost, they will have identical effects on the number of hours people choose to work. Which of the following best evaluates the advisor's claim?
A large, unexpected inheritance and an hourly wage increase that provides an equivalent boost to total income will have the same effect on an individual's work-leisure choice, because both scenarios increase the individual's purchasing power, allowing them to afford more leisure time.
Match each economic term or event to its correct description regarding an individual's work-leisure choice, assuming leisure is a normal good.
Evaluating a Junior Analyst's Model
Deconstructing the Work-Leisure Decision
An individual who considers leisure a normal good receives a significant hourly wage increase. Arrange the following statements to describe the logical sequence of economic reasoning that explains the change in their work-leisure decision.
Comparing Income Sources and Labor Supply