Optimality Condition for Firm's Employment
A firm is operating at a point on its no-shirking wage curve where the curve is steeper than the isoprofit curve passing through that same point. Explain, in economic terms, why this point is not profit-maximizing and what specific action (regarding wages and employment) the firm should take to increase its profits.
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Ch.6 The firm and its employees - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Analogy Between Firm's Profit Maximization and Consumer's Utility Maximization
Profit Trajectory Along the No-Shirking Wage Curve
Solving for Optimal Wage and Employment Using Simultaneous Equations
Figure 6.16: The Firm's Profit-Maximizing Equilibrium
Two competing firms, Firm 1 and Firm 2, must simultaneously decide whether to advertise their product or not. The table below shows the resulting profits for each firm based on their combined decisions. The first number in each cell is Firm 1's profit, and the second is Firm 2's profit. Assuming both firms act rationally in their own self-interest and make their decisions independently, what is the most likely outcome?
Firm 2: Advertise Firm 2: Don't Advertise Firm 1: Advertise ($10M, $10M) ($25M, $4M) Firm 1: Don't Advertise ($4M, $25M) ($20M, $20M) A firm's profit-maximizing choice of wage and employment occurs at the point of tangency between its 'no-shirking wage curve' (the minimum wage needed to motivate workers at each employment level) and the highest attainable 'isoprofit curve' (combinations of wage and employment that yield the same profit). Why is a point where an isoprofit curve intersects (crosses) the no-shirking wage curve not the optimal choice for the firm?
Analysis of a Firm's Employment Strategy
Analysis of a Firm's Employment Strategy
Optimality Condition for Firm's Employment
A firm seeks to maximize its profit by choosing a wage and a corresponding number of employees. The firm must pay a wage high enough to motivate its workers, and this required wage increases as more workers are hired, defining a feasible wage-employment curve. The firm is currently operating at a point on this curve where the rate of increase in the required wage is less than the rate at which the firm can trade off higher wages for more employees while keeping its profit constant. To increase its profit, what should the firm do?
Consider a firm choosing its wage and employment level along a curve representing the minimum wage required to motivate workers at each level of employment. At its current operating point, the firm finds that the slope of its isoprofit curve is steeper (more negative) than the slope of the wage-employment curve. This indicates that to increase profits, the firm should reduce the wage and employ fewer workers.
A profit-maximizing firm must choose a wage and an employment level from a set of feasible options. These options are represented by an upward-sloping curve, where a higher level of employment requires a higher wage. At the firm's current position on this curve, the following conditions hold:
- The slope of the feasible wage-employment curve is +0.5. This means that to hire one more worker, the firm must increase the wage by €0.50.
- To maintain its current level of profit, the firm can trade off wages and employment at a rate of €0.75 per worker. This means it could increase the wage by €0.75 for one additional worker and its profit would remain unchanged.
Given this information, what should the firm do to increase its profit?
Evaluating a Consultant's Hiring Recommendation
A firm chooses its wage and employment level along an upward-sloping curve that represents the minimum wage required to ensure workers do not shirk. The firm's objective is to maximize profit. At its current operating point, the firm finds that the rate at which it can trade a higher wage for more employment without changing its profit is greater than the rate at which it must increase the wage to hire one more motivated worker. Based on this information, what should the firm do to increase its profit?