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Impact of Institutional Rules on Economic Outcomes
Consider two scenarios involving a landowner and a tenant farmer. In Scenario A, the only rule is that the landowner can make a take-it-or-leave-it offer, and the farmer, having no other options, must accept any offer that provides at least a minimal amount for survival. In Scenario B, new legislation is introduced that gives the farmer the right to refuse any offer and guarantees them a basic survival income if they choose not to work. Analyze how this change in rules from Scenario A to Scenario B affects the landowner's ability to capture economic rent.
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Consider an interaction between a landowner and a farmer. In the first situation, the landowner can make a take-it-or-leave-it offer and use coercion to ensure the farmer accepts. In a second situation, new laws are introduced that grant the farmer the right to refuse any offer without reprisal and guarantee them a basic subsistence income if they choose not to work for the landowner. Why is the economic rent captured by the landowner lower in the second situation compared to the first?
Analyzing the Impact of Bargaining Power on Economic Rent
Impact of Institutional Rules on Economic Outcomes
Consider two scenarios involving a landowner and a tenant farmer. In Scenario A, the landowner can use coercion to dictate the terms of an agreement. In Scenario B, new legislation is introduced that prevents coercion and guarantees the tenant a minimum level of welfare even if they refuse to work for the landowner. The resulting shift in allocation from Scenario A to Scenario B can be described as a Pareto improvement.
When institutional rules change to grant a farmer the right to refuse a landowner's work offer without penalty, the landowner's economic rent from the agreement is reduced. This reduction occurs primarily because the new rules improve the farmer's ______.
Evaluating Economic Outcomes Under Different Institutional Frameworks
An interaction between a landowner and a farmer can occur under different sets of rules ('institutions'). Match each institutional framework to the resulting distribution of the economic surplus.
A country transitions from a system where a landowner can use coercion to a system where new laws protect a worker's right to refuse any offer and provide a basic 'no-work' benefit. Arrange the following statements into a logical sequence that explains the resulting reduction in the landowner's economic rent.
Calculating the Impact of Bargaining Power on Economic Rent
Consider a scenario where a farm worker produces a fixed amount of grain on land owned by a landowner. Initially, the landowner has absolute bargaining power. Subsequently, a new law grants the worker a basic survival income if they choose not to work, increasing the worker's bargaining power. This results in the worker receiving a larger share of the harvest, and consequently, the landowner receives a smaller share. The total amount of grain produced remains the same. The landowner claims this new outcome is 'economically inefficient'. Which of the following statements provides the best assessment of the landowner's claim?