Analyzing Optimal Choice on a Budget Line
An individual experiences a wage increase, which results in a new, steeper budget line. Their new optimal choice is a bundle of consumption and free time represented by a point where this new budget line is tangent to an indifference curve. Explain why a different point on the same new budget line, but one that is not tangent and instead intersects a lower indifference curve, is not considered an optimal choice.
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Optimal Choice Balances MRS with the Higher Wage (MRT)
An individual receives a wage increase. Their new utility-maximizing choice is to work 6 and 2/3 hours per day, earning €300 for consumption, which leaves them with 17 and 1/3 hours of free time. This combination represents a point of tangency between their new budget constraint and a higher indifference curve. Which statement accurately describes the situation at this specific optimal point?
Analyzing an Optimal Consumption-Leisure Choice
Analyzing Optimal Choice on a Budget Line
An individual's wage increases, and they adjust their daily schedule to have 17 and 1/3 hours of free time while earning €300 for consumption. At this specific combination of free time and consumption, the personal value they place on an additional hour of free time is exactly equal to the income they would forgo by not working that hour.
After a wage increase, an individual's new utility-maximizing choice is a bundle of 17 1/3 hours of free time and €300 of consumption. Consider another bundle, Point X, which is also on their new budget constraint but involves more free time and less consumption. Which statement accurately analyzes the individual's preferences at Point X compared to the wage rate?
Evaluating an Alternative Choice After a Wage Increase
Calculating the Implied Wage Rate from an Optimal Choice
An individual's wage increases. Their new optimal choice is a bundle of €300 in consumption and 17 1/3 hours of free time. Match each characteristic of this new equilibrium with its correct economic interpretation.
Evaluating a Deviation from an Optimal Choice
Interpreting the Value of Free Time at the Optimal Point