Essay

Critiquing Model Assumptions in Labor Economics

In a common economic model of employment, an employee's motivation is partly determined by two key assumptions: 1) a single, fixed monetary value represents the personal 'cost of effort' for every hour worked (e.g., $2 per hour), and 2) the employee evaluates their job's value over a fixed 'planning horizon' (e.g., 156 weeks). Critique the realism of these two assumptions. Discuss the potential limitations of using such fixed parameters to predict real-world employee behavior and explain why they might still be useful in an economic model.

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Updated 2025-07-27

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Economics

Introduction to Microeconomics Course

The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ

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