Learn Before
Analyzing Household Income Scenarios
A diagram displays the relationship between market income and disposable income for three different households.
- Household A: Market income is significantly greater than disposable income.
- Household B: Disposable income is greater than market income.
- Household C: Market income and disposable income are exactly the same.
For each household, analyze and describe a plausible economic situation that would lead to the observed relationship between their two income measures. Your explanation for each must incorporate the effects of government taxes and cash transfers.
0
1
Tags
Economics
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
A bar chart displays two bars side-by-side for a typical household. The first bar, labeled 'Market Income,' is taller than the second bar, labeled 'Disposable Income.' What does the difference in height between the two bars represent?
Policy Impact on Household Income
Evaluating Measures of Household Financial Well-being
For a household that receives more in government support payments (transfers) than it pays in taxes, its disposable income will be greater than its market income.
Interpreting Income Visualizations
A standard economic diagram illustrates the transition from a household's initial earnings to its final take-home resources. Match each term below to the role it plays in this transition.
A household's final take-home pay is calculated by adjusting its initial earnings for government actions. Arrange the following components in the correct logical order to represent this calculation, starting with the initial earnings.
A diagram for a particular household shows a bar representing its 'Market Income' and another bar representing its 'Disposable Income'. If the 'Disposable Income' bar is noticeably taller than the 'Market Income' bar, what is the most accurate conclusion that can be drawn about this household's financial situation?
Analyzing Household Income Redistribution
To calculate a household's disposable income from its market income, one must subtract taxes paid to the government and add any ____ received from the government.
A bar chart displays two bars side-by-side for a typical household. The first bar, labeled 'Market Income,' is taller than the second bar, labeled 'Disposable Income.' What does the difference in height between the two bars represent?
Relationship Between Income Types
Imagine a government decides to increase the amount of cash benefits it provides to low-income households, while keeping tax rates the same. For a household that receives these new, larger benefits, how would this policy change the relationship between its market income and its disposable income?
For any given household, its market income will always be greater than its disposable income.
Analyzing Household Income Scenarios
Household Income Analysis
Match each potential relationship between a household's market income and its disposable income with the corresponding scenario involving taxes paid and cash transfers received.
Analyzing Income Relationships
A household's financial data reveals that its disposable income is substantially greater than its market income. This situation strongly implies that the amount the household receives in government ____ is significantly larger than the amount it pays in taxes.
A policymaker claims that market income is the most accurate indicator of a household's financial well-being because it reflects pre-tax earnings from labor and investments. Which of the following scenarios provides the strongest critique of this viewpoint by highlighting the importance of disposable income?