Graphical Analysis of the Impact of New Labor Legislation (Figure 5.16)
This diagram analyzes the impact of new labor legislation on Angela's choices. The horizontal axis represents Angela's free time from 0 to 24 hours, and the vertical axis represents her grain consumption from 0 to 70 bushels. The graph includes a downward-sloping, concave feasible frontier connecting points (0, 64), A (16, 46), M (19.5, 35), and (24, 0). It also shows two parallel, convex indifference curves. The first, IC2, represents her original reservation utility and passes through point L (16, 23). The second, IC_N, represents her new, higher reservation utility and passes through point N (19.5, 23). IC_N is positioned entirely above IC2, indicating a higher utility level. In this scenario, Bruno's share of the grain at allocation N is represented by the vertical distance between point M on the feasible frontier and point N on Angela's indifference curve.
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CORE Econ
Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Activity: Identifying Pareto-Efficient Allocations That Benefit Angela
The Feasible Frontier Production Function in the Angela-Bruno Model
Feasible Set in the Angela-Bruno Model
Evaluating a Production Strategy
Downward Slope of the Feasible Frontier and Opportunity Cost
Concave Shape of the Feasible Frontier and Diminishing Marginal Returns
Allocation R (16, 34) as a Counter-Offer with Equivalent Surplus for Bruno
A country's feasible frontier for producing two goods, consumer electronics and agricultural products, is typically drawn as a curve that is bowed outwards from the origin (concave). What is the primary economic reason for this characteristic shape?
A manufacturing firm produces two types of goods: widgets and gadgets. The firm's production capabilities can be represented by a standard downward-sloping, concave feasible frontier, with widgets on the vertical axis and gadgets on the horizontal axis. Match each production scenario with its correct economic interpretation relative to this frontier.
Calculating Opportunity Cost on a Production Frontier
A technological improvement that increases the efficiency of producing only one of two goods will cause a parallel outward shift of the entire feasible frontier for production.
Analyzing a Policy Shift Using the Feasible Frontier
If an economy is operating at a point inside its feasible frontier for production, it means that it is possible to increase the output of one good without ____ the output of another.
A country's economy produces two goods, industrial robots and wheat, and is currently operating at a point on its feasible production frontier. At this point, it produces 5,000 robots and 20 million tons of wheat annually. If the government mandates an increase in robot production to 6,000 units, what is the direct and necessary consequence for wheat production, assuming no change in technology or the total amount of available resources?
A firm's production capabilities for two products, X and Y, are represented by a standard downward-sloping, concave feasible frontier. Given the following three production scenarios, arrange them in descending order based on their level of productive efficiency.
Evaluating a Production Proposal
Bruno's Feasible Set under Coercion
Graphical Analysis of the Impact of New Labor Legislation (Figure 5.16)
Baseline Case: Angela's Optimal Choice as an Independent Farmer
New Legislation Improves Angela's Reservation Position
Angela's Trade-off - Less Grain Production for Higher Utility
Bruno's Profit Maximization Strategy Under Legal Constraints
The New Feasible Set Under Legal Constraints
A landowner's profit is the total grain produced by a worker minus the wage he pays her. He aims to make an offer of work hours and wages that maximizes his profit. A new law is enacted that introduces two binding constraints on any contract offer: 1) The worker cannot work more than 4.5 hours per day. 2) The wage must be at least 23 bushels of grain. Assume that more hours worked always results in more grain produced, and the worker will accept any legally valid offer. Given these new constraints, which of the following offers will the landowner make to maximize his profit?
Analyzing Labor Market Constraints
Analyzing the Impact of Labor Market Regulations
A landowner's profit-maximizing contract offer to a worker is 8 hours of work for a wage of 20 bushels of grain. A new law is enacted that restricts all contracts to a maximum of 4.5 hours of work and a minimum wage of 23 bushels. True or False: The landowner's profit will necessarily decrease as a result of this new law.
A landowner wants to offer a contract (work hours and wage) to a worker to maximize his profit, which is the total output minus the wage. Assume that output always increases with more hours worked. New legislation imposes two rules on any contract: the maximum workday is 4.5 hours, and the minimum wage is 23 bushels. Match each element of the landowner's decision-making process with its correct description.
Analyzing the Impact of Legal Constraints on Economic Decisions
A landowner, who aims to maximize profit (total output minus the wage paid), must devise a new contract offer for a worker. This new offer is subject to recently passed legislation that imposes a maximum workday and a minimum wage. Arrange the following steps in the logical order the landowner would follow to determine his single most profitable, legally-compliant offer. Assume that more hours worked always results in more output.
A landowner's profit is calculated as the total output produced by a worker, which increases with more hours worked, minus the wage paid to the worker. New legislation is introduced that creates two legally binding rules for any contract: 1) the workday cannot exceed 4.5 hours, and 2) the wage must be at least 23 bushels. To maximize his profit under these new rules, the landowner will offer a contract with the maximum legally allowed hours and the ______ legally allowed wage.
Profit Maximization under Legal Constraints
A landowner's profit is determined by the total output a worker produces minus the wage paid. The landowner offers contracts specifying daily work hours and a wage. Assume that more hours worked always results in more output. Initially, the landowner had a wide range of contract options. New legislation is introduced, creating two binding rules for all future contracts: 1) The maximum workday is 4.5 hours. 2) The minimum wage is 23 bushels of grain. Which of the following potential contracts is the only one that remains legally permissible for the landowner to offer?
Allocation N: Outcome of Bruno's Optimal Offer Under Legislation
Graphical Analysis of the Impact of New Labor Legislation (Figure 5.16)
Learn After
Activity: Determining Which Counter-Offers Bruno Might Accept
Activity: Formulating Angela's Optimal Counter-Offer
Determining Angela's Optimal Counter-Offer
Angela's Counter-Offer as a Win-Win Agreement (Pareto Improvement)
The Indifference Curve IC2 in Figure 5.16
Activity: Evaluating Outcomes of New Labor Legislation
The Indifference Curve IC_N in Figure 5.16
Graphical Representation of Angela's Improved Utility (IC_N vs IC2)
New Legislative Rule: Fallback Position and Voluntary Agreement