Incompatible Claims on Output with Low Unemployment
When unemployment falls below the supply-side equilibrium level, the claims on output from workers and firms become incompatible. At this lower unemployment rate, the real wage required to motivate workers, as indicated by the Wage-Setting curve, is higher than the real wage firms can offer while maintaining their profit-maximizing markup (the Price-Setting curve). This conflict means that if workers were to receive their desired wage, firms' real profits per worker would be compressed below their target level of .
0
1
Tags
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.4 Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Related
In an economy, the total output produced by a single worker in a day is a fixed amount. Firms set their prices to ensure they receive a certain fraction of this output as profit, while the rest is paid to the worker as a real wage. Imagine a situation where workers successfully bargain for a real wage that, when added to the real profit per worker that firms are targeting, exceeds the total daily output per worker. What is the most likely immediate consequence of this conflict over the distribution of output?
Analyzing Income Distribution in a Simple Economy
The Division of Output at Equilibrium
In an economy where the total output per worker is valued at $100, firms set prices such that they retain $20 per worker as real profit. Simultaneously, workers successfully bargain for a real wage of $85. This situation represents a stable supply-side equilibrium because both parties have achieved their desired outcomes.
In an economic model, the total output per worker (λ) is divided between the worker's real wage and the firm's real profit. The firm's markup over costs is represented by σ. Match each concept to its correct description.
The Role of Compatible Claims in Economic Stability
In a simplified economy, the total output per worker is $150. For the claims on this output to be compatible at the supply-side equilibrium, if firms retain $30 as real profit per worker, the real wage paid to each worker must be $____.
An economy is initially in a state where the claims on output by workers (as wages) and firms (as profits) are consistent with the total output produced. A change then occurs that gives workers increased bargaining power, leading them to demand a larger share of the output. Arrange the following events in the logical sequence that describes the immediate economic adjustment process that follows.
Consider an economy where total output per worker is constant and initially in a state of equilibrium, meaning the real wage paid to workers and the real profit per worker claimed by firms are compatible. If a new government policy successfully increases the level of competition among firms, what is the most likely outcome for the distribution of output at the new equilibrium?
In an economic model, the total output produced per worker is divided between the worker's real wage and the firm's real profit. A stable equilibrium requires the claims of both parties to be compatible with the total output available. In which of the following scenarios are the claims on output incompatible, creating pressure for an upward adjustment in the price level?
Incompatible Claims on Output with Low Unemployment
Figure 4.5: Supply-Side Equilibrium and Compatible Claims on Output
Learn After
Inflationary Consequence of Low Unemployment
Labor Market Tensions in a Booming Economy
Consider an economy where a sustained economic boom has driven the unemployment rate to a very low level, below the point of labor market equilibrium. In this situation, what is the fundamental conflict that arises between workers and firms over the division of output per worker?
In an economy where the unemployment rate has fallen below its equilibrium level, the real wage required to sufficiently motivate workers is less than the real wage that allows firms to maintain their desired profit margins.
Explaining the Conflict at Low Unemployment
A government implements a new policy that uses tax revenue to fund grants for students from low-income households, making it easier for them to afford higher education. Which social or allocative function of fiscal policy does this initiative primarily represent?