Match each type of performance information an employer might gather with the specific contractual action it is considered sufficient to support.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
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A company's private cost function for producing a good is described by the equation C(Q) = 500 + 20Q + 0.5Q², where C is the total cost and Q is the quantity of output. Based on this function, which statement best describes the behavior of the company's marginal private cost (MPC) as production increases?
In a standard employment model where the threat of job loss is the primary motivator for employee effort, which statement best characterizes the nature of the information the employer is assumed to possess about a worker's performance?
Applying the Labour Discipline Model's Monitoring Assumption
A delivery company uses GPS tracking to get occasional, delayed reports on whether a driver significantly deviates from their assigned route. This information is not detailed enough to adjust pay based on the number of packages delivered per hour, but it is used to identify and dismiss drivers who are consistently off-task. How does this company's approach to supervision align with the assumptions of the labour discipline model regarding monitoring and firing?
Sufficiency of Information in Employment Contracts
According to the simplified assumptions of the labour discipline model, an employer must have continuous and precise data on an employee's output to have sufficient grounds for termination due to inadequate work.
Match each type of performance information an employer might gather with the specific contractual action it is considered sufficient to support.
Evaluating the Realism of the Monitoring Assumption
Performance Management in a Tech Firm
A manager at a software company reviews a developer's code contributions at the end of each month. The manager cannot precisely measure the developer's daily effort or the exact number of 'effective' lines of code written, making a pay-per-line incentive scheme impractical. However, after several months of review, the manager observes a consistent pattern of incomplete and poorly documented work, leading to the developer's dismissal. Which of the following statements best explains why this situation aligns with the monitoring and firing assumptions of the labour discipline model?
A delivery company uses GPS tracking to get occasional, delayed reports on whether a driver significantly deviates from their assigned route. This information is not detailed enough to adjust pay based on the number of packages delivered per hour, but it is used to identify and dismiss drivers who are consistently off-task. How does this company's approach to supervision align with the assumptions of the labour discipline model regarding monitoring and firing?