Learn Before
Evaluating Job Offers with the Work-Leisure Model
The standard aggregate work-leisure model suggests an individual should be indifferent between two job offers if they both provide the same total income and the same total hours of leisure. Based on the model's known limitations, explain why this conclusion might be incorrect in the real-world scenario presented below.
0
1
Tags
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Application in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Evaluating Job Offers with the Work-Leisure Model
An individual is offered two jobs with identical total weekly pay and total weekly hours. Job A requires working a fixed 9 AM to 5 PM schedule, Monday to Friday. Job B allows the individual to work the same total number of hours anytime they choose throughout the week. The individual strongly prefers Job B. Which of the following best explains why a standard aggregate work-leisure model, which only considers total hours of work and total consumption, would fail to predict this preference?
The standard aggregate work-leisure model, which considers only total weekly consumption and total weekly leisure, would predict that an individual is indifferent between a job with a rigid 40-hour work week and another job offering the same total pay and hours but with a completely flexible schedule.
Work Schedule Constraints and the Aggregate Model
Critique of the Aggregate Work-Leisure Model's Realism
The aggregate work-leisure model simplifies choices by only considering total hours of work and leisure. Match each of the following real-world scenarios to the specific limitation of this model that it best illustrates.
Evaluating a Consultant's Model
A primary weakness of the aggregate work-leisure model is its failure to account for the ________ of leisure and work, treating all free hours as perfectly interchangeable regardless of when they occur.
An economic model that only considers an individual's total weekly income and total weekly leisure time concludes that the optimal work schedule is 4 hours per day, 7 days a week. The individual, however, can only find jobs that require working in fixed 8-hour shifts. This discrepancy reveals a significant limitation of the model because:
Evaluating a Labor Policy Proposal