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An Increased Cost of Effort (c) Shifts the No-Shirking Wage Curve Upward
An increase in the cost of effort (c) for employees, which may be caused by factors like declining morale, compels a firm to offer higher wages to effectively discourage shirking. This necessity results in an upward shift of the entire no-shirking wage curve. This process is often analyzed from an initial state of profit maximization, such as at point E, where the original curve is tangent to the highest possible isoprofit curve.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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An Increased Cost of Effort (c) Shifts the No-Shirking Wage Curve Upward
Positive Relationship Between Employment Rent, Cost of Effort (c), and Shirking Duration (s)
Parameters for Maria's Case (Cost of Effort c = $2/hour, Planning Horizon h = 156 weeks)
Calculating Net Utility per Hour
Evaluating a Job's Net Utility to Determine Employment Rent
A family operates a small restaurant where the parents are the sole owners. Their two children work in the restaurant after school. The children do not receive a formal wage but are provided with housing, food, and a personal allowance. The primary goal of the restaurant is to provide a stable livelihood for the family. Which of the following statements best analyzes why this organization might not be classified as a traditional firm?
An individual is offered two full-time jobs. Job A pays $30 per hour and requires physically demanding labor in an outdoor setting with unpredictable weather. Job B pays $25 per hour and involves tasks performed in a climate-controlled, comfortable office. Assuming the individual's goal is to maximize their personal satisfaction from their employment, which statement best analyzes the decision-making process?
Analyzing Subjective Cost of Effort
Analyzing Subjective Cost of Effort
Evaluating Workplace Policies and Employee Effort
An employee earns an hourly wage of $22. The personal cost they experience from the effort and unpleasantness of their work is valued at $4 per hour. The employee's net satisfaction, or utility, from one hour of work is $____.
A graphic designer is paid a fixed hourly wage at a marketing agency. The agency introduces a new policy requiring all designers to manually log every minute of their work in a cumbersome, slow software system. This new task is widely seen as tedious and frustrating. Assuming the designer's wage and all other job responsibilities remain the same, how does this policy change affect the designer's perception of their job?
Evaluating Strategies to Boost Employee Productivity
Evaluating Managerial Strategies to Mitigate the Cost of Effort
A manufacturing company replaces its old, physically demanding machinery with new, state-of-the-art ergonomic equipment designed to reduce the physical strain on its employees. The employees' hourly wages and production targets remain unchanged. How does this investment most likely affect the employees' experience of their job?
Learn After
An Increased Cost of Effort Results in Higher Wages, Lower Employment, and Reduced Profit
A manufacturing company replaces its user-friendly assembly line controls with a new, more complicated system. This change significantly increases the mental fatigue and frustration for its workers, even though the physical tasks remain the same. The company's management wants to ensure that workers do not reduce their diligence and care. Based on the economic model that links wages to worker effort, what is the most likely immediate consequence of this change for the firm's wage-setting strategy?
Impact of Workplace Conditions on Wage Strategy
Workplace Morale and Wage Policy
In a labor market model where firms set wages to deter shirking, if working conditions deteriorate (e.g., due to declining morale or increased job stress), thereby increasing the disutility of effort for employees, the 'no-shirking wage' curve will shift downward. This is because the firm must lower its wage offers to compensate for the less desirable work environment.
The Economic Rationale for Compensating for Poor Working Conditions
Imagine a scenario where a company's workplace culture deteriorates, significantly increasing the mental and emotional toll for employees to exert a high level of effort. To maintain the same level of worker diligence and prevent slacking, the firm must now offer a higher wage for any given rate of unemployment. This fundamental change is represented graphically by a(n) ________ shift of the curve that plots the minimum wage needed to ensure effort.
A regional airline, in an effort to cut costs, reduces the number of ground crew staff per flight. This action significantly increases the workload and stress for the remaining employees. To prevent a rise in service errors and maintain the previous standard of employee diligence, what is the most likely consequence for the airline's wage policy, as predicted by models where wages are set to ensure worker effort?
A software development firm replaces its efficient project management tool with a new, bug-ridden system that causes frequent crashes and data loss. This change significantly increases stress and frustration for its developers. Assuming the firm wants to maintain its programmers' original level of diligence and prevent a drop in code quality, arrange the following economic consequences in the correct logical order.
A firm's wage-setting policy is designed to pay the minimum amount necessary to prevent employees from slacking, taking into account external economic conditions and the inherent difficulty of the job. Which of the following scenarios would not lead the firm to offer a higher wage for any given level of unemployment to ensure a given level of employee effort?
A firm's management understands that the wage it pays must be high enough to make the job valuable and discourage shirking. This wage is affected by how difficult or unpleasant the work is (the 'cost of effort'). Match each workplace change described below with its most likely impact on the cost of effort and the necessary wage adjustment.