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Negotiating Power and Alternative Options
A skilled graphic designer is negotiating a salary for a full-time position. The designer has determined that their best alternative to this job is freelance work, which provides an annual net benefit (considering income, expenses, and leisure) equivalent to a $60,000 salary. Analyze what determines the lowest salary the designer would likely accept from the company. Then, explain how and why the designer's negotiating position changes if a new freelance opportunity arises that increases their alternative net benefit to the equivalent of a $70,000 salary.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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Angela's Reservation Option in Case 2 vs. Case 1 (IC2 vs. IC1)
Improved Reservation Position Leads to Better Contract Offers
Angela's Improved Reservation Option Reduces Bruno's Profit
Composition of Angela's Wage
Angela's Participation Constraint for Contract Acceptance
A tenant farmer can either work on a landowner's farm or accept an alternative job in a nearby town that provides her with a daily utility equivalent to receiving 4 bushels of grain. A new government policy is enacted, guaranteeing a subsistence income equivalent to 5 bushels of grain to anyone who is unemployed. Assuming the farmer wants to maximize her outcome, how does this new policy affect her negotiations with the landowner?
The Farmer's Alternative
True or False: A freelance software developer is negotiating a contract for a new project with a large tech firm. If a general downturn in the tech industry reduces the number and value of other projects available to the developer, the total economic surplus that the firm can potentially capture from this specific contract negotiation will likely decrease.
Negotiating Power and Alternative Options
A freelance web developer is negotiating a project with a small business. The business values the completed website at $10,000. The developer's next-best alternative is another project that would provide them with a value of $4,000. They agree on a price of $6,500 for the project. Match each economic concept to its correct value based on this scenario.
Evaluating a Negotiator's Best Alternative
A freelance programmer is offered a contract to build a website for a local restaurant, which will pay $8,000 upon completion. The programmer has two other immediate opportunities they could pursue instead: one is a project for a non-profit that would yield a personal value (profit plus goodwill) equivalent to $6,500, and the other is a part-time consulting role that would provide a net income of $6,000. To decide whether to accept the restaurant's offer, the programmer must consider their best alternative. The value of this programmer's reservation option is $______. (Enter a number only, without commas or currency symbols).
A graphic designer is negotiating a contract for a new project. They have also received a competing offer for a different project. Arrange the following events in the logical order that reflects how the designer would use their alternative offer to influence the negotiation.
Determining the Reservation Point in a Negotiation
A manufacturing company is in the final stages of hiring a specialized engineer. The company knows the engineer has a competing job offer from another firm. The company's initial salary negotiation strategy is based on the assumption that the competing offer is for $90,000 per year. Just before making its final offer, the hiring manager learns that the competing offer is actually for $100,000 per year. Assuming the company still wants to hire this engineer and aims to pay just enough to secure them, what is the most direct consequence of this new information on the negotiation?
Angela's Reservation Option in Case 2 vs. Case 1
Detailed Description of Figure 5.13 - Comparing Outcomes in Case 1 (Force) and Case 2 (Choice)