Explaining Operational Differences in Business Structures
Two bicycle manufacturing companies, 'CyclePro' and 'RiderUnited', operate in the same city. Both employ 100 assembly line workers and generate similar annual revenues. However, their operational structures and costs differ significantly. CyclePro is a conventionally-owned firm that employs ten full-time supervisors to monitor worker productivity. RiderUnited is a worker-owned cooperative where the assembly workers are also the owners of the company; it employs only two managers who primarily handle administrative and logistical tasks, with no dedicated floor supervisors. Based on the principles of firm organization, explain the most likely reason why RiderUnited can operate effectively with a much smaller supervisory staff than CyclePro.
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Social Science
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Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Application in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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Peer Pressure against Shirking in Worker-Owned Cooperatives
Productivity of Worker-Owned Cooperatives
A conventional firm, which previously employed a large number of supervisors to monitor employee effort, is converted into a worker-owned cooperative. Following the conversion, the firm is able to maintain its output levels with a significantly reduced supervisory staff. Which statement best analyzes the fundamental economic reason for this reduction in the need for supervision?
Consider a graph representing an individual's choice between two goods. A downward-sloping curve shows the combinations of goods that are possible to produce (the feasible frontier), and a convex curve shows combinations that provide equal satisfaction (an indifference curve). At a specific point of intersection, Point A, the feasible frontier is visibly steeper than the indifference curve. Based on this graphical information, what can be concluded about the relationship between the individual's willingness to trade one good for another and the actual trade-off required by the production possibilities at Point A?
Explaining Operational Differences in Business Structures
Incentive Structures and Supervision in Different Firm Models
Supervision Costs in Different Business Models
The primary reason worker-owned cooperatives require less supervision than conventional firms is that the managers they hire are typically more effective at motivating employees.
A management consultant, primarily experienced with traditional corporations, is hired by a successful worker-owned cooperative. The consultant observes a low ratio of managers to employees and recommends hiring more supervisors to increase oversight and enforce stricter production targets. Which statement best analyzes the potential flaw in this recommendation based on the cooperative's business structure?
Match each business structure with the description that best explains its typical need for employee supervision.
Evaluating a Business Restructuring Proposal
Analyzing Cost Structures in Different Firm Models