Conditions for Favorable Labor Market Outcomes in the WS-PS Model
Within the WS-PS framework, a country can achieve favorable labor market outcomes—specifically, high real wages and low unemployment—through two key conditions. Firstly, it requires factors that push the price-setting (PS) curve upwards, thereby increasing the equilibrium real wage. Secondly, it needs to maintain a relatively low wage-setting (WS) curve, which allows for high levels of employment and correspondingly low unemployment.
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Ch.2 Unemployment, wages, and inequality: Supply-side policies and institutions - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Conditions for Favorable Labor Market Outcomes in the WS-PS Model
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A country enacts new legislation that significantly increases the bargaining power of labor unions, allowing them to negotiate for higher wages at any given level of employment. Within the framework of the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) model, what is the most likely outcome of this policy change on the country's structural unemployment rate?
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Learn After
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An economist observes that Country A has a significantly higher natural rate of unemployment compared to Country B, but the real wage for employed workers in Country A is also higher. According to the wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework, which of the following structural differences most likely explains this combination of outcomes in Country A relative to Country B?
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