Evaluating an Economic Impact Projection
You are an economic advisor for a city council reviewing a proposal for a large public infrastructure project. The project's proponents claim it will create 5,000 jobs for currently unemployed residents and will boost the city's total annual income by $250 million. They arrived at this figure by multiplying the 5,000 jobs by the city's current average annual wage of $50,000 for employed workers. Based on the principles of labor market analysis, critique this income projection. What specific factors are being overlooked, and how would they likely affect the actual income generated by these new jobs?
0
1
Tags
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
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
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
A government analyst is tasked with estimating the potential economic impact of a policy designed to move all currently unemployed individuals into jobs. The analyst calculates the potential GDP increase by multiplying the number of unemployed people by the current average wage of employed workers. What is the most significant analytical error in this approach?
Evaluating an Economic Impact Projection
Evaluating a Claim About Unemployment and Wages
A study concludes that if a country's 1 million unemployed workers were to find jobs, the country's total wage bill would increase by exactly the current average national wage multiplied by 1 million. This conclusion is sound because it correctly uses the average wage as the best estimate for the earnings of new workers.
Critique of a Wage Assumption
Match each statement about labor market analysis with the economic concept or consequence it best describes.
A policymaker proposes a new program to find jobs for all unemployed individuals, claiming it will boost national income by an amount equal to the number of unemployed multiplied by the current average wage. Which of the following statements best analyzes the primary flaw in the policymaker's assumption about wages?
Evaluating an Economic Impact Projection
Imagine a country is recovering from a recession. A large number of individuals who were previously unemployed for an extended period find new jobs. These new jobs are primarily in sectors that require less specialized skills than the jobs held by the pre-existing workforce. What is the most likely immediate impact on the country's average wage for all employed workers?
Explaining Wage Predictions