Multiple Choice

An economist analyzes an individual's response to a wage increase, decomposing the change in hours worked. The initial choice is point A, and a hypothetical point C is used to isolate one component of the total change. The economist makes the following statement: 'The movement from point A to point C represents the income effect, showing the individual chooses more free time. Because this isolated effect shows a preference for more free time, it must be stronger than the substitution effect.' What is the fundamental error in this reasoning?

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Updated 2025-07-23

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Introduction to Microeconomics Course

The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ

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