Analyzing Subjective Well-being from a Policy Change
A government program gives every qualifying citizen a free, high-quality bicycle. Citizen A lives in a dense, bike-friendly city and is thrilled, as they can now cycle to work. Citizen B lives in a remote, rural area with no paved roads and has no use for the bicycle, finding it to be just another item to store. Both citizens have experienced the exact same change in their allocated material possessions. Explain why, based on the economic principle of well-being, only Citizen A can be definitively described as 'better off'.
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Library Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
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Pareto Criterion
Pareto Improvement
An office worker, Sam, is currently allocated a parking space that is a 10-minute walk from the building entrance. The company reallocates the parking spaces, and Sam is now given a space that is a 2-minute walk from the entrance. However, the new parking space is uncovered, whereas the old one was in a covered garage. Sam expresses great satisfaction with the new arrangement, stating a strong preference for a shorter walk over having a covered space. From an economic standpoint, which of the following statements accurately describes Sam's situation?
Evaluating Well-being Beyond Monetary Gain
An individual receives a promotion that increases their salary by 20% but also doubles their commute time. From an economic perspective, because their monetary income has increased, this individual is unquestionably 'better off'.
Evaluating a Lifestyle Change
Match each scenario to the statement that best describes the individual's change in well-being, based on the principle that 'better off' is determined by subjective preference.
Analyzing a Public Policy Change
Two friends, Alex and Ben, each receive an identical, expensive coffee machine as a gift. Alex is a coffee lover and is delighted with the new machine, which he prefers to his old one. Ben does not drink coffee and finds the machine to be a cumbersome object taking up space in his small kitchen. Based on the economic principle that being 'better off' is determined by subjective preference, which statement is the most accurate assessment of their situations?
Analyzing Subjective Well-being from a Policy Change
Evaluating a Claim about Economic Growth
Critiquing an Economic Argument about Community Development