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Simplifying Assumption: Financing of Unemployment Benefits
When analyzing the economic impact of unemployment benefits, a common simplifying assumption is that the government funds the program by reallocating its existing budget (shifting spending priorities). This approach allows for an analysis that isolates the effects of the benefit itself, without the confounding influence of how the necessary revenue is generated, such as through new taxes.
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Ch.2 Unemployment, wages, and inequality: Supply-side policies and institutions - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
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Individual and Market-Wide Components of a Worker's Reservation Wage
Simplifying Assumption: Financing of Unemployment Benefits
Gross Unemployment Benefit Replacement Rate
From an economic standpoint, which statement best analyzes the fundamental trade-off of a government program that provides financial payments to individuals who are out of work?
Analyzing a Change in Unemployment Benefit Policy
Economic Effects of Unemployment Payments
Incentive Effects of Unemployment Payments
Match each statement related to government payments for the unemployed with the economic concept it best describes.
A government program that provides financial assistance to the unemployed is primarily designed to reduce the time individuals spend searching for a new job, thereby speeding up their re-entry into the workforce.
An individual who was earning a pre-tax monthly salary of $4,000 loses their job. They begin receiving a government payment of $1,800 per month while they search for new employment. How can the value of this payment be best expressed in relation to their previous earnings to understand its financial impact?
Government-provided financial assistance for the unemployed is intended to act as an income buffer. However, by reducing the immediate financial pressure to find work, these payments can unintentionally _________ the average amount of time an individual spends searching for a new job.
Evaluating an Economic Policy's Outcomes
Critiquing a Policy Statement on Unemployment Assistance
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An economist is creating a model to study the immediate effects of a new unemployment benefits program on consumer spending. The economist assumes the program will be paid for by reallocating funds from the existing government budget, rather than by introducing a new tax. What is the most likely analytical reason for making this assumption?
Evaluating Economic Models for Unemployment Benefits
Critique of a Common Economic Modeling Assumption
Rationale for a Modeling Assumption
An economist is building a model to isolate how an increase in unemployment benefits affects the spending habits of recipients. In this context, assuming the benefits are funded by a new, broad-based sales tax would be a more effective simplifying assumption than assuming the funds are reallocated from other government programs.
An economist is building a model to study the direct impact of unemployment benefits on recipient spending. To isolate this effect, the economist must consider how the benefits are funded. Match each funding method with the primary confounding economic effect it would introduce into the analysis, which a simplifying assumption is meant to avoid.
Designing an Economic Model for Labor Market Analysis
An economist develops a model to analyze the impact of a new unemployment benefits program. The model shows that after the program's implementation, which was funded by a new, broad-based income tax, overall consumer spending in the economy decreased. The economist concludes that the unemployment benefits program itself had a negative effect on consumer spending. Which statement best analyzes a potential flaw in the economist's conclusion?
Two economists are studying the effect of an increase in unemployment benefits on the job search behavior of unemployed individuals.
- Economist 1 builds a model where the increased benefits are funded by reallocating money from the government's infrastructure budget.
- Economist 2 builds a model where the increased benefits are funded by a new, small tax levied on the wages of all employed individuals.
Which economist's model is better designed to isolate the direct behavioral impact of the benefits themselves, and why?
Confounding Variables in Economic Models