Broad Application of the Economic Model of Choice
The economic model used to analyze how individuals choose their working hours is not limited to labor-leisure decisions. It serves as a versatile framework applicable to a wide range of other economic problems where choices are made under constraints.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Model of Constrained Choice (Decision Making Under Scarcity)
Hypothesis: Income Inequality Explains Cross-Country Differences in Work Hours
Time Use Studies
Explaining Cross-Country Work-Hour Differences via Wages vs. Preferences
Limitations of the Ceteris Paribus Assumption in Work-Leisure Models
Broad Application of the Economic Model of Choice
Learn After
Allocating Scarce Resources
A city government has a fixed annual budget to allocate between two public services: improving road infrastructure and funding public parks. The government's objective is to maximize citizen well-being, which is assumed to increase with both better roads and more park funding. Within the standard economic model of choice under scarcity, what does the city's fixed annual budget represent?
Applying the Economic Choice Model to Study Time
A government implements a policy that gives every citizen a guaranteed income sufficient to cover basic needs, regardless of whether they work. According to the standard economic model of choice, where individuals make trade-offs to maximize their well-being under constraints, what is the most likely effect of this policy on an individual's decision-making?
A core economic model explains how individuals or groups make choices when they cannot have everything they want. This involves a trade-off between competing goals due to a limited resource. Match each scenario below with the primary limited resource that defines the choice problem.
Evaluating Societal Trade-offs Using the Economic Choice Model
A software engineer earning a high salary decides to switch to a lower-paying job at a non-profit organization because they find the work more fulfilling. According to the economic model of choice, where individuals make decisions to maximize their overall well-being under constraints, this decision is considered irrational.
A policymaker is using the economic model of choice to decide how to allocate a fixed environmental fund between two initiatives: reforestation projects and ocean cleanup programs. Arrange the following steps in the logical order required to apply this model and find the optimal allocation.
A student has a total of 10 hours to study for two final exams and wants to achieve the highest possible combined score. In the economic model of choice, the 10 hours of available study time represents the student's ________.
Marketing Budget Allocation for a Small Bakery