Evaluating Efficient Economic Outcomes
Imagine an economic scenario with two possible outcomes, both of which are confirmed to be economically efficient, meaning no one can be made better off without making someone else worse off.
- Outcome 1: One person receives 90% of the total resources while contributing 10% of the total work. A second person receives 10% of the resources despite contributing 90% of the work.
- Outcome 2: Both individuals contribute equally to the work and the total resources are divided equally between them.
Argue which of these two economically efficient outcomes is more desirable for a society. Justify your position by explaining why the criterion of efficiency alone is insufficient for this judgment.
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Evaluating Efficient Economic Outcomes
Consider two possible arrangements for dividing a harvest of 100 bushels of grain, which is the maximum amount that can be produced. Both arrangements are considered economically efficient, meaning it's impossible to make one person better off without making the other worse off.
Arrangement X: One person performs all the labor and receives 10 bushels, while a second person performs no labor and receives 90 bushels. Arrangement Y: Both individuals contribute equally to the labor and each receives 50 bushels.
Based on this information, which statement presents the most valid reason for a society to judge Arrangement Y as more desirable than Arrangement X?
Evaluating Efficient Economic Outcomes
In an economic interaction, if two different outcomes are both confirmed to be Pareto efficient, a society must be indifferent between them because no further improvements can be made without harming someone.
Evaluating Efficient Outcomes
An economy can produce a maximum of 100 units of a good. Match each of the following distributions of the good between two individuals, Person A and Person B, with the correct description of its efficiency and fairness.
A social planner is evaluating two possible economic policies for a community. Both policies result in the maximum possible output, meaning no resources are wasted.
- Policy 1: Results in a distribution where 10% of the population receives 90% of the total income.
- Policy 2: Results in a distribution where the total income is divided equally among the entire population.
From an economic standpoint, what is the most accurate analysis of these two policies?
Critique of Efficiency as the Sole Criterion
The Limits of Economic Efficiency
A small community can produce a maximum of 1,000 units of food per year. An economic advisor is analyzing two possible distribution systems, both of which achieve this maximum output, meaning they are both Pareto efficient.
- System A: One person receives 900 units of food, and the other 99 people in the community share the remaining 100 units.
- System B: All 100 people in the community receive 10 units of food each.
The advisor concludes, 'Since both systems are Pareto efficient, there is no economic basis for preferring one over the other.'
Which of the following statements provides the most accurate critique of the advisor's conclusion?