Evaluating a Landowner's Profit Strategy
A landowner is considering forcing a tenant farmer to work longer hours, believing that any increase in total harvest will increase the landowner's own surplus. Based on the situation described below, evaluate the landowner's belief and justify your answer.
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Maximizing Surplus under Coercion
A landowner, who can compel a tenant farmer to work, seeks to maximize their own share of the harvest. At the current arrangement, the amount of extra grain produced from one more hour of the farmer's labor is greater than the amount of grain the farmer requires as compensation to give up that hour of free time (while remaining at their minimum survival level of well-being). To maximize their surplus, what should the landowner do?
Evaluating a Coercive Labor Contract
Evaluating a Coercive Labor Contract
An economic advisor tells a landowner, who has the power to compel a tenant farmer to work, the following: "To maximize your own surplus, you should force the farmer to work the number of hours that results in the largest possible total harvest." Evaluate this advice.
A landowner has coercive power over a farmer and wants to choose a work requirement that maximizes the landowner's own surplus (the grain left over after giving the farmer just enough to survive). The landowner knows two things for any given level of work: 1) The rate at which an extra hour of the farmer's work can be transformed into additional grain. 2) The rate at which the farmer, at their survival level, is willing to trade an hour of free time for grain. How should the landowner identify the surplus-maximizing number of work hours?
A landowner, who can compel a farmer to work, wants to maximize the amount of grain they keep. At the current arrangement, the amount of extra grain produced if the farmer works one more hour is greater than the amount of grain the farmer would need to be compensated to willingly give up that hour of free time (while remaining at their survival level). True or False: The landowner has found the arrangement that maximizes their own surplus.
A landowner with coercive power over a farmer aims to maximize their own grain surplus. The farmer is provided with just enough grain to survive. At the current work arrangement, the amount of additional grain that would be produced from one more hour of the farmer's labor is 2 bushels. However, the amount of grain required to compensate the farmer for that lost hour of free time (to keep them at their survival level of well-being) is 3 bushels. Based on this information, what should the landowner do to maximize their surplus?
Analyzing the Surplus-Maximizing Condition under Coercion
Evaluating a Landowner's Profit Strategy