Evaluating Causes of Wage Stagnation
A historian argues that the main reason British workers' wages did not rise with productivity from the mid-1700s to the mid-1800s was that the workforce lacked the necessary skills and education to command higher pay in the new industrial economy. Critique this argument. In your response, explain why the eventual rise in wages in the mid-19th century supports or refutes the historian's claim.
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CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Historical data from Britain shows that while labor productivity began to rise significantly around the mid-eighteenth century, substantial and sustained growth in real wages for the average worker did not occur until nearly a century later, in the mid-nineteenth century. Which of the following statements best analyzes the primary reason for this observed lag?
Analyzing Wage Stagnation Amidst a Productivity Boom
Explaining the British Wage-Productivity Lag
Historical records from Britain show a significant delay between the start of increased labor productivity and the beginning of substantial real wage growth for workers. Based on the economic principles explaining this phenomenon, arrange the following three events in the correct chronological order in which they occurred.
Explaining the Shift in Wage Dynamics
Match each historical period or economic concept with the description that best explains its role in the relationship between productivity and wages in Britain.
True or False: In mid-eighteenth-century Britain, the immediate introduction of new, more efficient machinery in factories directly and proportionally increased the real wages of the workers operating them.
A historian argues that technological innovation, by increasing output, is always the direct and sufficient driver of wage increases for workers, pointing to the British Industrial Revolution as an example. Which of the following facts from that era presents the strongest challenge to the historian's argument that technology was a sufficient cause for wage growth?
A modern developing nation sees its manufacturing sector's productivity double over a decade due to new automation. However, the real wages of manufacturing workers remain stagnant. The government is considering two proposals:
Proposal 1: Offer tax credits to firms that invest in even more advanced productivity-enhancing technology. Proposal 2: Pass laws that protect and simplify the process for workers to form trade unions and engage in collective negotiation.
Based on economic principles derived from historical periods that saw similar gaps between productivity and wage growth, which proposal is more likely to directly address the wage stagnation issue, and why?
Evaluating Causes of Wage Stagnation