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Satisfying the No-Shirking Condition Motivates Diligent Work
A direct consequence of a wage satisfying the no-shirking condition is that it incentivizes the employee to work hard. By ensuring the payoff from working is at least as high as from shirking, the employer's wage offer effectively motivates the employee to choose diligence over shirking.
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CORE Econ
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Economics
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
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Satisfying the No-Shirking Condition Motivates Diligent Work
Assumption of No Shirking at Equal Payoffs
A company pays its workers a wage specifically calculated to be just enough to prevent them from shirking (not working diligently). Suppose the government increases the level of unemployment benefits that a worker would receive if they were fired. Holding all other factors constant, how must the company adjust its wage to maintain the same level of employee effort, and what is the reason for this adjustment?
Calculating the Minimum Wage to Prevent Shirking
Evaluating a Wage Strategy to Ensure Effort
An employee earns a wage of $25 per hour. The personal cost (disutility) of working hard is equivalent to $3 per hour. If the employee chooses not to work hard, there is a 40% chance they will be caught and fired. If fired, their next best alternative is an unemployment benefit equivalent to $10 per hour. Based on this information, the condition to ensure the employee does not shirk is met.
An employer is setting a wage to incentivize an employee to work hard. This involves comparing the employee's potential outcomes from working versus shirking. Match each key component of this economic model to its correct description.
Analyzing the Components of Employee Motivation
Calculating Minimum Detection Probability
In a model where a firm sets a wage to prevent an employee from shirking, if the personal cost of exerting effort for the employee increases, the minimum wage the firm must offer to maintain the same level of diligence must ____.
An employee is deciding whether to work diligently or to shirk, based on the wage offered by their employer and other given conditions. Arrange the following steps in the logical order that represents the employee's decision-making process.
A company pays a wage that is precisely at the level required to prevent employees from shirking. Two events occur simultaneously: 1) The company implements a new management system that significantly increases the probability of detecting a shirking employee. 2) A local economic downturn reduces the value of the unemployment benefits a fired employee would receive. To minimize labor costs while still ensuring employees do not shirk, how should the company adjust the wage it pays?
An employee earns a wage of $25 per hour. The personal cost (disutility) of working hard is equivalent to $3 per hour. If the employee chooses not to work hard, there is a 40% chance they will be caught and fired. If fired, their next best alternative is an unemployment benefit equivalent to $10 per hour. Based on this information, the condition to ensure the employee does not shirk is met.
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Wage Policy and Employee Effort
A company sets a wage for its workers that is high enough to make the value of keeping the job greater than the combined value of shirking (and getting away with it) and the risk of being fired. According to the principles of employee motivation this wage is designed to address, why does this strategy encourage diligent work?
Incentivizing Employee Effort
Incentivizing Employee Effort
A company observes that many of its employees are not working diligently. The current wage is equal to the average market rate, meaning a fired employee can likely find a similar-paying job elsewhere. The company wants to implement a new policy to ensure the value of working diligently is greater than the value of shirking. Which of the following proposed policies is LEAST likely to achieve this goal?
A company wants to design a compensation and oversight plan to provide the strongest possible motivation for its employees to work diligently. The company understands that an employee's decision to work hard depends on both the value of keeping their job and the likelihood of being caught if they do not. Which of the following combinations of wage level and monitoring intensity would be most effective at achieving the company's goal?
An employer can ensure an employee will work diligently solely by offering a wage significantly above the market rate, even if the chance of being caught for not working is extremely low.
A firm is considering different strategies to ensure its employees work diligently. Match each strategy with the most likely employee behavioral outcome based on the principle that employees compare the value of working hard versus not working hard.
Critique of a Productivity Improvement Plan
An employee values the personal cost of working diligently at $5 per hour. If they do not work diligently, there is a 20% chance they will be caught and fired, at which point their next best employment option pays $15 per hour. What is the minimum hourly wage this company must pay to ensure the employee's expected payoff from working diligently is at least as high as their expected payoff from not working diligently?