Essay

Evaluating the Consequences of a Labor Law

A new law is introduced in a simplified economy with one employer and one worker. The law stipulates two conditions for any employment contract: (1) the worker cannot be required to work more than 4.5 hours per day, and (2) if any work is performed, the worker must be paid a minimum of 23 units of output. The employer, whose goal is to maximize their own profit (total output minus wages paid), offers the worker a 'take-it-or-leave-it' contract for exactly 4.5 hours of work in exchange for 23 units of output. The worker's only alternative to accepting this contract is to not work, which provides them with 0 units of output.

Critique this new legislation and the resulting employment contract from the following three perspectives:

  1. The worker's welfare.
  2. The employer's profit.
  3. The overall efficiency of the outcome (i.e., is it possible to make at least one party better off without making the other worse off?).

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Updated 2025-07-27

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Economy

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CORE Econ

Introduction to Microeconomics Course

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