Historical Application of Income-Substitution Decomposition (Figure 3.16)
The economic model that decomposes a wage increase into income and substitution effects, as theoretically illustrated in Figure 3.13b, can be applied to explain the historical shift in US work-leisure choices between 1900 and 2020 (from point A to D in Figure 3.16). This application reveals that the observed increase in both free time and consumption occurred because the income effect of rising wages was stronger than the opposing substitution effect.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Historical Application of Income-Substitution Decomposition (Figure 3.16)
The Overall Effect in US Historical Data (Movement from A to D)
US Work-Leisure Choices in 1900 vs. 2020 (Figure 3.16)
Point A (1900) in Figure 3.16 as an Optimal Choice
Point D (2020) in Figure 3.16 as an Optimal Choice
The Income Effect in Figure 3.16 (Movement from A to C)
Point C as a Hypothetical Optimal Choice in Figure 3.16
The Substitution Effect in Figure 3.16 (Movement from C to D)
Real Wage as the Slope of the Budget Constraint in Figure 3.16
Inferring Worker Preferences in the US Historical Model (Figure 3.16)
The Hypothetical Budget Constraint for Isolating the Income Effect
Point C (41.5 Free Days, $3,959 Consumption) as a Hypothetical Choice
The Overall Effect as the Sum of Income and Substitution Effects
Original, Final, and Hypothetical Budget Constraints in Figure 3.13b
Graphical Representation of the Income Effect (Movement from A to C)
The Overall Effect (Movement from A to D)
The Substitution Effect (Movement from C to D) as a Shift to a Higher MRS
Historical Application of Income-Substitution Decomposition (Figure 3.16)
Learn After
Dominance of the Income Effect in US Work-Leisure Choices (1900-2020)
Generalizing the Work-Leisure Model to Other Historical Data
Over the last century, a country experienced significant economic growth, leading to a substantial increase in the average real wage. During the same period, historical data shows that the average number of hours worked per week decreased, while leisure time increased. Using the model of individual choice, how can the interplay between the income and substitution effects best explain this observed trend?
Analyzing Historical Labor Trends
Consider a hypothetical country where, over the past 50 years, average real wages have steadily increased, and simultaneously, the average number of weekly work hours has also risen. This observed outcome implies that for the average worker, the substitution effect of the wage increases has been stronger than the income effect.
Evaluating a Claim about Historical Labor Trends
Interpreting Historical Labor Market Data
A country experiences a significant rise in average wages over several decades. Match each economic concept to its correct description in the context of an individual's decision about how many hours to work.
When historical data shows that a sustained increase in a country's average real wage was accompanied by a decrease in average hours worked, it indicates that for the typical worker, the ______ effect of the wage increase dominated the substitution effect.
An economist is using the income and substitution effect framework to analyze a historical trend where a sustained rise in a country's average wage was accompanied by a change in average hours worked. To do this, they must theoretically decompose the total change in leisure time into two parts. Arrange the logical steps of this decomposition analysis in the correct order, according to the standard model of individual choice.
Evaluating a Historical Labor Market Analysis
An economic historian studying labor trends in Country X from 1960 to 2020 finds that while the average real wage tripled during this period, the average number of hours worked per person remained virtually unchanged. Based on the model of individual choice between work and leisure, what is the most logical conclusion to draw from this observation?
Activity: Decomposing the Effects for US Historical Data (Figure 3.16)