Analyzing a Pareto-Efficient Allocation Shift
A farmer working 14 hours produces 11.9 bushels of grain, with the output shared. The farmer proposes a new agreement where she still works 14 hours, but requests 4 bushels of grain. For the new allocation to remain Pareto-efficient, what is the maximum grain the landowner can receive, and why?
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CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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In an economic model involving a worker and a landowner, the amount of grain produced depends on the hours the worker labors. Consider an allocation where the worker has 10 hours of free time (working 14 hours) and the total grain produced is 10 bushels. This output is then divided between the two individuals. If it is technologically possible to produce 11.9 bushels with the same 14 hours of work, why is the allocation that yields only 10 bushels considered Pareto inefficient?
Analyzing a Pareto-Efficient Allocation Shift
Evaluating a Pareto-Efficient Distribution
Consider an economic scenario where the maximum output a worker can produce with 14 hours of labor is 11.9 bushels of grain. In one specific distribution of this output, the worker consumes 3.13 bushels and a landowner receives 8.78 bushels. True or False: It is possible to change this distribution so that the worker consumes 4 bushels and the landowner still receives 8.78 bushels, without the worker laboring for more than 14 hours.
Justifying Pareto Efficiency
In an agricultural scenario, a worker has 10 hours of free time and works for 14 hours, producing a total of 11.9 bushels of grain, which is the maximum possible output for that amount of labor. The output is divided so that the worker receives 3.13 bushels and a landowner receives the remaining 8.78 bushels. Which statement correctly analyzes this allocation?
Based on an economic model where the maximum output for 14 hours of work is 11.9 bushels of grain, and less work always results in less output, match each specific allocation scenario with the economic principle it best illustrates.
Evaluating a Distributional Proposal
In a two-person economy, a farmer works 14 hours a day to produce a total of 11.9 bushels of grain, which is the maximum possible output for that amount of work. The farmer keeps 3.13 bushels for personal consumption. For this allocation to be on the frontier of what is technologically possible, the landowner must receive ____ bushels of grain.
Evaluating a Re-distribution Proposal