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Analyzing Model Applicability Across Different Economies
An economist uses a single, standardized wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework to model the labor markets of two different countries. The model's predictions for the natural rate of unemployment are very accurate for Country A, which has strong national unions and concentrated industries. However, the predictions are consistently wrong for Country B, which has a decentralized labor market and highly competitive firms. Identify the primary limitation of the modeling framework revealed in this scenario and explain why it fails for Country B.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.2 Unemployment, wages, and inequality: Supply-side policies and institutions - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Critique of a Policy Recommendation
An economic advisor proposes using a standardized wage-setting and price-setting framework to create labor market policy for a diverse group of countries. The advisor argues that its core principles are universally applicable for determining the natural rate of unemployment. Which of the following statements provides the most accurate critique of this proposal?
Evaluating the Predictive Power of the WS-PS Model
The wage-setting and price-setting framework is considered a robust tool for cross-country analysis primarily because its underlying assumptions about firm and worker behavior hold true universally, making the model's structure directly applicable to any economy without modification.
Applicability of the Price-Setting Curve
An economist uses a standard wage-setting and price-setting framework to analyze a country's labor market. The model predicts a natural unemployment rate of 4%. However, historical data for the last decade consistently shows the country's actual unemployment rate hovering around 7%, even during periods of stable inflation. What is the most significant limitation of the framework highlighted by this discrepancy?
An economy undergoes a significant structural shift where a large portion of the workforce moves into the 'gig economy,' characterized by individual contracts and a lack of collective bargaining. An economist using a standard wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework, which assumes a uniform level of union influence and firm market power, finds that the model's predictions for real wages and unemployment are now consistently inaccurate. Which fundamental limitation of the framework does this situation best illustrate?
Evaluating the Application of a Standardized Economic Model
Analyzing Model Applicability Across Different Economies
Match each economic scenario with the specific limitation of the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework it best illustrates.