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Explaining Labor Market Inefficiency
A company decides to pay its workers a wage that is significantly higher than the minimum they would need to show up for the job. This strategy works well; employees are motivated and productive. However, this high wage means the company hires fewer workers, leaving some people who are willing and able to work unemployed. Explain why this outcome, where the company and its current employees are both satisfied, is not considered a fully efficient outcome for the overall market.
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CORE Econ
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Labor Market Outcomes Analysis
Evaluating a Firm's High-Wage Strategy
In a particular labor market, all firms pay a wage significantly higher than the minimum amount workers require to take a job. This strategy successfully motivates their current employees to exert high effort. However, it also results in a queue of qualified, unemployed individuals who would willingly work for the high wage but cannot find a position. How should this market outcome be characterized in terms of economic efficiency?
In a labor market where firms use high wages to ensure employee effort, the outcome is considered Pareto efficient because the firms benefit from high productivity and the employed workers receive a wage greater than what they would require to simply accept the job.
Explaining Labor Market Inefficiency
In a labor market where firms pay wages higher than the minimum required to attract workers in order to motivate effort, different parties and the market as a whole experience specific outcomes. Match each element below with its correct economic description.
In a labor market model where employers set wages higher than the minimum required by workers in order to incentivize effort, the resulting existence of ________ is the key reason why the final allocation is not considered Pareto efficient.
In a labor market where firms pay a wage higher than the minimum required to attract workers, there are involuntarily unemployed individuals who would gladly accept a job at the current wage. Why is this situation considered Pareto inefficient?
In a labor market, a firm pays its employees a wage significantly above the minimum they would accept, successfully motivating them to exert high effort. This practice, however, leads to a situation where there are equally qualified, unemployed individuals who would willingly accept a job at a wage lower than what the current employees receive. Why is this outcome considered Pareto inefficient?
Arrange the following statements into a logical sequence that explains why the use of a high wage to motivate employee effort results in a market outcome that is not Pareto efficient.