Critiquing a Core Assumption in Labour Market Analysis
An economic model is designed to understand the primary factors affecting a country's overall unemployment rate. A core assumption of this model is that all new jobs are filled by individuals who were previously unemployed. Critically evaluate this assumption. In your answer, discuss the main analytical benefit of making this simplification and identify at least two significant real-world hiring dynamics that this assumption fails to capture.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
An economist is developing a model to analyze the main factors influencing a nation's overall unemployment rate. The model includes the assumption that companies recruit all new employees from the existing pool of unemployed people, even though data shows many hires come from other jobs or from outside the active labor force. Which statement best evaluates the use of this assumption in the model?
A city council wants to understand the primary reason commuters might switch from driving to using a new subway line. They are presented with two economic models to explain this behavior.
- Model A is a complex simulation that includes dozens of variables: real-time traffic data, gas prices, car maintenance costs, weather, road construction, and the psychological stress of driving.
- Model B focuses only on two key variables: the price of a subway ticket versus the average time a commuter saves by not driving.
Which model is likely more effective for explaining the fundamental trade-off influencing the switch to the subway, and why?
Evaluating a Labour Market Policy Model
The Role of Simplifying Assumptions in Economic Models
For an economic model of the labor market to be considered valid and useful, it must precisely account for all sources of new hires, including those who are unemployed, those switching from other jobs, and those previously not in the labor force.
Assessing a Model's Fit for a Specific Industry
An economic model is built on the core assumption that all new hires are drawn exclusively from the pool of unemployed individuals. Which of the following economic questions would this model be LEAST equipped to analyze?
An economic model is constructed with the simplifying assumption that all new employees are hired from the pool of unemployed individuals. What is a direct analytical limitation of this model?
Critiquing a Core Assumption in Labour Market Analysis
Analyzing a Model's Predictive Failure