In a negotiation between a landowner and a farm worker, they are considering an arrangement where the worker would work 9 hours per day. At this level of work, the marginal product of the worker's labor is 3 bushels of grain per hour. However, the worker's personal valuation of that last hour of leisure is equivalent to 4 bushels of grain. To increase the total economic surplus available to be shared between them, what change should be made to the work arrangement?
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A landowner and a worker are negotiating an employment contract. The goal is to find the number of work hours that creates the largest possible total economic gain (joint surplus) for them to share. The worker's trade-off between free time and grain is shown by the slope of their indifference curve. The technological trade-off between the worker's free time and grain production is shown by the slope of the feasible frontier. Which of the following conditions identifies the number of work hours that maximizes this joint surplus?
Analyzing Joint Surplus in a Labor Contract
True or False: To maximize the total economic surplus available to be shared between a landowner and a worker, the landowner should determine the number of work hours by finding the point on the worker's reservation indifference curve that is also on the feasible production frontier.
The diagram below shows the feasible frontier for grain production based on a worker's hours of free time, along with the worker's indifference curves (IC). The slope of the feasible frontier is the Marginal Rate of Transformation (MRT), and the slope of an indifference curve is the worker's Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS). IC1 represents the worker's reservation indifference curve, the minimum outcome they will accept. Which point represents the allocation of work and pay that generates the largest possible total economic gain (joint surplus) to be divided between the worker and their employer?
[Diagram Description: A graph with 'Hours of Free Time' on the x-axis and 'Bushels of Grain' on the y-axis. A concave feasible frontier slopes down from left to right. Three indifference curves (IC1, IC2, IC3) are shown, with utility increasing from IC1 to IC3.
- Point A is where the reservation indifference curve (IC1) is tangent to the feasible frontier.
- Point B is on the feasible frontier, but it is not tangent to any indifference curve shown.
- Point C is where a higher indifference curve (IC2) is tangent to the feasible frontier.
- Point D is a point inside the feasible frontier on IC1.]
Optimizing an Agricultural Contract
In a negotiation between a landowner and a farm worker, they are considering an arrangement where the worker would work 9 hours per day. At this level of work, the marginal product of the worker's labor is 3 bushels of grain per hour. However, the worker's personal valuation of that last hour of leisure is equivalent to 4 bushels of grain. To increase the total economic surplus available to be shared between them, what change should be made to the work arrangement?
Evaluating a Labor Contract for Efficiency
Evaluating Contract Efficiency
A landowner and a worker have a contract where the worker currently works for 8 hours per day. At this point, the marginal product of an additional hour of labor is 4 bushels of grain. The worker's personal valuation of an hour of free time is equivalent to 2.5 bushels of grain. Based on this information, which of the following statements is true regarding the total economic surplus (the sum of the gains for both parties)?
Match each economic concept with its correct description in the context of determining the most efficient work arrangement between an employer and a worker.