Evaluating a Cooperative Opportunity
Analyze the following scenario to determine if the initial allocation of work is efficient. Explain why or why not, and describe the potential, if any, for a mutually beneficial agreement.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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Pareto Efficient vs. Pareto Inefficient Allocations
Potential for Pareto Improvement when MRS < MRT
Angela's Counter-Offer as a Win-Win Agreement (Pareto Improvement)
Pareto Inefficiency Example: Banana Plantations and Fishermen
Pareto Inefficiency of Private Choice Enables Mutual Gains
Evaluating a Cooperative Opportunity
Consider an economic scenario where an individual's subjective tradeoff between two goods, food and free time, is different from the economy's technological tradeoff. The individual's marginal rate of substitution (MRS) indicates they are willing to give up 2 units of food for one additional hour of free time. The economy's marginal rate of transformation (MRT) shows that producing one additional hour of free time requires a reduction in food output of 3 units. Based on this information, what is the correct conclusion?
True or False: An economic outcome is described where an individual is willing to give up 15 bushels of wheat for one more hour of leisure (their subjective trade-off), but that one hour of work would only produce 10 bushels of wheat (the technological trade-off). This situation is considered Pareto efficient because no mutually beneficial reallocation of time is possible.
Analyzing Economic Inefficiency
Analyzing Opportunities for Mutual Gain
Match each economic scenario, defined by the relationship between an individual's subjective trade-off (how much of a good they are willing to give up for an hour of leisure) and the technological trade-off (how much of that good is actually produced in an hour), with its correct implication.
Consider an allocation of resources where a worker is willing to give up one hour of leisure time in exchange for 3 loaves of bread. However, the bakery's technology allows that same hour of labor to produce 5 loaves of bread. This discrepancy between the worker's subjective trade-off and the actual production trade-off signifies that the current allocation is Pareto __________.
An economic analyst observes an allocation of resources where an individual's subjective trade-off between a good and leisure does not match the technological trade-off of production. This indicates an opportunity for a mutually beneficial change. Arrange the following steps into the logical sequence required to identify and realize this potential gain.
Optimizing a Work Arrangement
An artisan values an hour of their leisure time at an amount equivalent to 10 units of food (their subjective trade-off). A landowner observes that one hour of the artisan's labor on their land can produce 18 units of food (the technological trade-off). Currently, the artisan is not working for the landowner. Which of the following potential agreements for one hour of work would represent a mutually beneficial outcome where both parties are better off than in the initial situation?