Feasible Frontier Segment where Only Luis Works (Figure 3.22)
This portion of the household's feasible frontier, depicted in Figure 3.22, is the line segment connecting point (34, 0) to point K (26, 240). This segment illustrates the household's consumption possibilities under the condition that only Luis, who has a higher wage, is engaged in paid work. It originates from a scenario with no paid work (34 non-working hours) and extends to the point where Luis reaches his maximum daily work limit of 8 hours, which corresponds to 26 non-working hours for the household.
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CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Activity: Analyze the Household's Choice with Gender Discrimination using Figure 3.22
Feasible Frontier Segment where Only Luis Works (Figure 3.22)
Feasible Frontier Segment where Both Ana and Luis Work (Figure 3.22)
The Household's New Optimal Choice under Discrimination (Point D in Figure 3.22)
Representation of the Original Optimal Choice (Point B) in Figure 3.22
Unattainable Segment of the Original Feasible Frontier (Figure 3.22)
Learn After
RoboWidgets Inc. Production Analysis
A household has a total of 34 non-working hours available per day, shared between two individuals. One individual can earn $30 per hour for up to 8 hours of work, while the other has no opportunity for paid work. The household's feasible frontier plots their total consumption against their total non-working hours. What is the slope of the segment of the feasible frontier that represents the outcomes where the earner works between 0 and 8 hours?
Interpreting the Feasible Frontier
A household has a combined total of 32 non-working hours per day. One member can earn $20 per hour for up to 10 hours of work per day, while the other member does not engage in paid work. The household's feasible frontier plots their total daily consumption against their total daily non-working hours. Which of the following points, representing (non-working hours, consumption), could not be on the segment of the feasible frontier where only the earner is working?
Consider a household with a total of 34 non-working hours available per day. One member of the household can earn $30 per hour for a maximum of 8 hours of work, while the other member does not engage in paid work. The household's feasible frontier plots their total consumption against their total non-working hours. Statement: The outcome represented by 28 total non-working hours and $180 of total consumption is both feasible and efficient.
Calculating a Point on the Feasible Frontier
Defining Work-Consumption Boundaries
Evaluating a Claim about the Feasible Frontier
A two-person household has a total of 30 non-working hours available per day. One person can work up to 10 hours per day at a wage of $25 per hour, while the other person does not engage in paid work. The household's feasible frontier plots their total daily consumption against their total non-working hours.
Now, suppose the government introduces a program that provides a flat, unconditional cash grant of $50 per day to the household. How does this grant affect the segment of the feasible frontier representing the outcomes where only the one person is working?
Deriving Economic Constraints from a Feasible Frontier
A household has a combined total of 32 non-working hours per day. One member can earn $20 per hour for up to 10 hours of work per day, while the other member does not engage in paid work. The household's feasible frontier plots their total daily consumption against their total daily non-working hours. Which of the following points, representing (non-working hours, consumption), could not be on the segment of the feasible frontier where only the earner is working?