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An individual has significant, non-negotiable responsibilities for unpaid household labor. Match each economic concept to its most accurate description in the context of how this individual might respond to a wage increase.
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Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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An individual has a fixed, significant weekly commitment to unpaid domestic labor. This person then receives a substantial hourly wage increase at their job. According to the work-leisure model, why is this individual more likely than someone without such commitments to work the same number of hours, or even fewer, after the wage increase?
Work-Leisure Decisions with Unpaid Labor
Unpaid Labor and the Work-Leisure Decision
For an individual with significant unpaid work responsibilities, a wage increase will cause the substitution effect to more strongly outweigh the income effect, compelling them to supply more hours of paid labor.
Comparing Responses to a Wage Increase
An individual has significant, non-negotiable responsibilities for unpaid household labor. Match each economic concept to its most accurate description in the context of how this individual might respond to a wage increase.
For an individual with substantial, non-negotiable unpaid work obligations, their available 'free time' is less flexible. This inflexibility reduces the power of the ________ effect when their wage increases, making it more likely that they will choose to work the same or fewer hours.
An individual with significant, non-negotiable unpaid work responsibilities receives a substantial wage increase. Arrange the following statements into the correct logical sequence that explains why this individual might choose to work fewer hours.
Analyzing Labor Supply Responses to a Wage Increase
Analyzing the Impact of Unpaid Work on Labor Supply