Explaining Constant Optimal Work Hours
An individual is choosing how many hours to work. They find that their optimal number of work hours is exactly the same under two different payment schemes. In both schemes, the hourly wage rate is identical, but one scheme involves paying a large, fixed daily fee that reduces their total daily income. Using the concept of the marginal rate of substitution (MRS), explain why their optimal choice of work hours might not change despite the difference in total income.
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An individual determines their optimal balance between hours of free time and the amount of goods they can consume. A new policy is introduced that reduces their total consumption by a fixed amount, regardless of how many hours they work. Despite this reduction in consumption, the individual's optimal number of free time hours remains unchanged. What feature of the individual's preferences best explains this outcome?
Consider an individual who chooses their optimal balance of free time and consumption. If this individual decides to work fewer hours after receiving a large, fixed cash inheritance that is independent of their work, it implies that their preferences for free time and consumption cannot be quasi-linear.
Explaining Constant Optimal Work Hours
Impact of a Fixed Stipend on Labor Choice
The Invariance of Labor Choice under Quasi-Linear Preferences
Match each type of preference structure with its resulting effect on an individual's optimal choice of work hours following a lump-sum, non-work-related increase in their income (like winning a small lottery).
When an individual's preferences are quasi-linear, their optimal choice of free time remains constant even if their income changes by a fixed amount. This occurs because their Marginal Rate of Substitution between free time and consumption is independent of their level of ____.
An individual with quasi-linear preferences, who is optimizing their balance between free time and consumption, receives a surprise government grant that provides a fixed amount of extra income regardless of work hours. Arrange the following statements to describe the logical sequence of how this individual adjusts their optimal choice.
Impact of a Fixed Cost on Labor Choice
An economist is studying an individual's preferences for consumption and free time by examining their indifference map. The economist observes a specific property: for any given amount of free time, the slope of every indifference curve at that point is identical. What does this property imply about the individual's optimal choice of work hours?