Landowner's Strategic Calculation
A self-interested landowner, who controls all the productive land, wants to maximize the grain they receive from a landless farmer's labor. The farmer has a minimum survival threshold. From the landowner's perspective, what are the two primary risks of offering the farmer an allocation below this survival threshold, and how does meeting this threshold mitigate those risks?
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Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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An economy is in a Malthusian subsistence equilibrium. A new farming technique is introduced that permanently increases the productivity of land. Arrange the following events in the correct chronological sequence as the economy adjusts to a new long-run equilibrium.
Landowner's Strategic Decision
A powerful landowner controls all the arable land in a region and employs a landless farmer to work it. The landowner's sole objective is to maximize the amount of grain they can extract from the farmer's labor over the long term. From a purely self-interested perspective, why would the landowner provide the farmer with an allocation of grain that is just enough to meet the farmer's minimum survival needs?
Strategic Considerations for a Landowner
Landowner's Strategic Calculation
A self-interested landowner, aiming to maximize their own long-term grain surplus, would logically choose to give a landless farmer the smallest possible amount of grain, even if it falls below the farmer's survival threshold, because any grain given to the farmer is a direct reduction of the landowner's surplus.
A self-interested landowner wants to maximize their long-term surplus from a farmer working their land. Match each of the landowner's potential considerations with its underlying strategic rationale.
Evaluating a Landowner's Strategy
Consequence of a Landowner's Miscalculation
A landowner, whose primary goal is to maximize their personal grain surplus over many years, employs a farmer who has no other means of survival. The farmer requires a minimum of 4 bushels of grain per year to survive and be able to work in subsequent years. Considering only the landowner's long-term self-interest, which of the following allocation strategies is the most logical for the landowner to choose?
Strategic Considerations for a Landowner