Learn Before
Power Determines Allocations and Payoffs in the Angela-Bruno Model
In an isolated economy, a single individual owns all the fertile land. Numerous landless workers can either accept a contract to farm for the landowner in exchange for a portion of the harvest or subsist on a minimal survival income from foraging. Two new policies are proposed to improve the workers' welfare:
- Policy X: A law is passed that legally requires the landowner to give any hired worker at least 35% of the harvest.
- Policy Y: A new law grants every worker a small, personal plot of less-fertile public land, which, if cultivated, provides an income better than foraging but less than the 35% share from Policy X.
Which policy makes a more fundamental change to the workers' bargaining power in relation to the landowner, and what is the reasoning?
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Spectrum of Power and Allocations in the Angela-Bruno Model
Consider an economic scenario where a landowner has exclusive control over a piece of land, and a farmer has the skills to work it. The only alternative for the farmer, if they refuse to work for the landowner, is a minimal survival income provided by the state. A new law is then passed which mandates that any farmer who refuses a work contract must be given a small plot for personal cultivation, providing an income better than the original state survival income but less than they would get from working for the landowner. How does this change in the 'rules of the game' affect the landowner's power and the likely distribution of the crop?
Impact of Policy on Economic Outcomes
In an economic model involving a farmer who works on land owned by another individual, the 'rules of the game' (institutional arrangements) significantly influence the bargaining power of each party and the final distribution of the harvest. Match each institutional scenario below with its most likely economic outcome.
Power Dynamics in Economic Allocation
Constraints on Power in Economic Negotiations
Consider an economic model where a farmer works land owned by a landowner. According to the principles governing this interaction, any change in the 'rules of the game' (e.g., new legislation) that results in the farmer receiving a larger quantity of the harvest must logically mean that the landowner receives a smaller quantity.
Consider an economic interaction between a landowner and a landless farmer where the landowner initially has the sole power to propose a take-it-or-leave-it division of the harvest. A new law is enacted that grants the farmer the right to appeal to an independent arbitrator if they reject the landowner's offer. Arrange the following events into the logical causal sequence that would result from this change in the 'rules of the game'.
Consider an economic interaction between a person who owns all the productive land and a person who has none. If a new law is passed that improves the landless person's alternative options for survival (e.g., a higher unemployment benefit or access to a small public plot), this change directly weakens the landowner's ____, leading to a negotiated outcome where the landless person receives a larger share of the produce.
In an isolated economy, a single individual owns all the fertile land. Numerous landless workers can either accept a contract to farm for the landowner in exchange for a portion of the harvest or subsist on a minimal survival income from foraging. Two new policies are proposed to improve the workers' welfare:
- Policy X: A law is passed that legally requires the landowner to give any hired worker at least 35% of the harvest.
- Policy Y: A new law grants every worker a small, personal plot of less-fertile public land, which, if cultivated, provides an income better than foraging but less than the 35% share from Policy X.
Which policy makes a more fundamental change to the workers' bargaining power in relation to the landowner, and what is the reasoning?
Evaluating a Labor Contract Proposal