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Evaluating the Significance of the Feasible Set's Size

In a negotiation between a landowner and a tenant farmer, the 'feasible set of agreements' represents all technically possible outcomes that the farmer would voluntarily accept. This set is graphically depicted as the area between the feasible production frontier (the upper boundary) and the farmer's reservation indifference curve (the lower boundary). Critically evaluate the following statement: 'A larger feasible set of agreements is always better for both the landowner and the farmer.' In your evaluation, explain what factors determine the size of this set and how its size relates to the potential gains from cooperation and the distribution of those gains.

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Updated 2025-10-07

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