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In an economic model where a landowner can either coerce a farmer or offer a take-it-or-leave-it contract, the optimal number of work hours for the farmer remains the same in both scenarios because the farmer's bargaining power is identical in both situations.
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In an economic model of a landowner and a tenant farmer, the total surplus (the amount of grain produced above what the farmer needs to survive) is maximized when the farmer works 8 hours per day. This outcome of 8 work hours is found to be the same regardless of whether the landowner uses coercion or makes a take-it-or-leave-it contract offer. Why does the surplus-maximizing number of work hours remain constant across these different institutional arrangements?
In an economic model where a landowner can either coerce a farmer or offer a take-it-or-leave-it contract, the optimal number of work hours for the farmer remains the same in both scenarios because the farmer's bargaining power is identical in both situations.
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