Graphical and Quantitative Analysis of the Reservation Wage
A simplified job search model yields the following linear equation for the reservation wage (r) as a function of the employee quit rate (q):
r = 5 + 2q
In this model, r is the minimum wage a worker will accept (in dollars per hour), and q is the probability that a job will end in any given period (e.g., q=0.1 means a 10% chance).
- Calculate the reservation wage when the quit rate is 10% (q = 0.10).
- Suppose new labor market regulations make jobs more stable, causing the quit rate to fall to 5% (q = 0.05). What is the new reservation wage?
- When this equation is plotted on a graph with the reservation wage (
r) on the vertical axis and the quit rate (q) on the horizontal axis, what is the value of the vertical intercept and the slope of the line?
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In a standard job search model, an individual determines a reservation wage, which is the lowest wage offer they are willing to accept. Suppose there is an economy-wide increase in the employee quit rate, meaning that the average duration of any given job becomes shorter. How would this change affect an individual's reservation wage, and what is the economic reasoning behind the change?
Reservation Wage Analysis in a Linear Probability Model
A job seeker's reservation wage (
r) is the wage at which they are indifferent between accepting a job and continuing to search. The following are jumbled steps to derive the specific formula forrbased on a simplified model where the probability of finding and accepting an offerwis linear, and there is a constant rateqat which jobs end. Arrange these steps into the correct logical order to represent the derivation process.Impact of Search Effectiveness on Reservation Wage
Evaluating a Linear Reservation Wage Model
Graphical and Quantitative Analysis of the Reservation Wage
A job seeker's decision to accept a wage offer can be modeled using a reservation wage (r), which is the lowest wage they will accept. The formula for this reservation wage is given by r = r₀ + (q/k), where r₀ is a baseline wage component, q is the probability that a job will end in a given period (the quit rate), and k is a parameter measuring the effectiveness of the job search. Initially, a job seeker has a baseline wage of $10/hour, a search effectiveness parameter of k = 0.05, and faces a quit rate of q = 0.10. Due to a change in economic conditions, the quit rate for all jobs increases to q = 0.15. What is the job seeker's new reservation wage?
Consider a job search model where an individual's reservation wage (
r) is determined by the formular = r₀ + (q/k), wherer₀is a baseline wage,qis the rate at which jobs end, andkis a parameter for search effectiveness.True or False: A 10% increase in the job-ending rate (
q) will always have a greater impact on the reservation wage (r) than a 10% decrease in search effectiveness (k).In a job search model, the reservation wage (
r) is the lowest wage an individual will accept. It is determined by the relationshipr = r₀ + (q/k), whereqis the rate at which jobs end,r₀is a baseline wage component, andkis a parameter representing the effectiveness of the job search. Consider the relationship between the reservation wage (r) and the job-ending rate (q), plotted withron the vertical axis andqon the horizontal axis. If there is an economy-wide improvement in job-matching technology that increases the effectiveness of a job search (an increase ink), which of the following descriptions correctly illustrates the change in the reservation wage curve?