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Core Production Assumptions of the Supply-Side Model
The simplified supply-side model is built on two core assumptions about production. First, labor is considered the only input required to produce output. Second, labor productivity (), or output per worker, is assumed to be constant, meaning it does not change regardless of the total number of people employed. These two assumptions together define the model's production function.
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Economics
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.1 The supply side of the macroeconomy: Unemployment and real wages - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Ch.4 Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Figure 1.12: Distribution of Output per Worker
Core Production Assumptions of the Supply-Side Model
Consider an economic diagram where the horizontal axis measures the number of people employed and the vertical axis simultaneously represents two values: the real wage paid to workers and the total output produced per worker. What is the primary analytical purpose of structuring a graph in this specific way?
In the standard graphical framework used to visualize the economy's supply side, match each axis with the economic variables it is designed to measure.
Interpreting a Supply-Side Economic Diagram
Rationale for the Vertical Axis in a Supply-Side Diagram
In the graphical framework used to represent the economy's supply side, where employment is on the horizontal axis and output per worker is on the vertical axis, the line representing output per worker slopes upward, indicating that productivity increases as more people are employed.
In the standard graphical model used to analyze the supply side of an economy, the horizontal axis measures levels of employment and unemployment. The vertical axis serves a dual purpose, representing both the real wage paid to an employee and the total value of ____.
Imagine you are constructing a diagram to represent the supply side of an economy from scratch. Arrange the following steps in the logical order required to build the basic graphical framework.
Analyzing the Distribution of Output in the Supply-Side Model
In a standard diagram representing an economy's supply side, the vertical axis measures both the real wage and output per worker, while the horizontal axis measures employment. If a major technological innovation permanently increases the amount of output each worker can produce, how would this change be reflected in the diagram?
Evaluating the Dual-Purpose Vertical Axis
Extensions of the Supply-Side Model for Analyzing Inequality, Inflation, and Productivity
Figure 1.11: Visual Representation of Labor Market Indicators
Constant Productivity Assumption in the Supply-Side Model
Distribution of Output and Profit per Worker
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Distribution of Output per Worker
A manager at a manufacturing plant observes that after hiring a tenth worker, the total daily output increased by 50 units. However, after hiring an eleventh worker, the total daily output increased by only 45 units. This observation of changing output per additional worker directly conflicts with which foundational assumption of a simplified production model?
Analyzing Production Data
Calculating Output in a Simplified Economy
A simplified economic model assumes that labor is the only input for production and that each worker contributes the same, constant amount to the total output, regardless of how many workers are employed. Which of the following graphs best illustrates the relationship between the total number of workers employed (horizontal axis) and the total output produced (vertical axis) based on these assumptions?
In a simplified economic model where labor is the only production input and output per worker is assumed to be constant, hiring additional workers will cause the average output per worker for the entire workforce to decrease.
A simplified economic model of production is based on two key ideas: 1) The total quantity of goods produced depends only on the number of people employed, and 2) Each person employed produces a constant, unchanging quantity of goods. A small factory operates according to this model, with each of its 5 workers producing 10 widgets per day, for a total of 50 widgets. The factory owner then invests in new, more efficient machinery. Now, the same 5 workers can produce a total of 75 widgets per day. Which of the model's two key ideas is most directly contradicted by this outcome?
Evaluating a Simplified Production Model
Evaluating Investment Strategies
Model Prediction vs. Reality
A simplified economic model of production is built on the core ideas that output depends only on the number of workers, and that the output produced per worker is constant. Given these ideas, which of the following tables showing the relationship between the number of workers and total daily output is consistent with the model?