The Influence of Personal Circumstances on Work-Leisure Preferences
An individual's preference for free time over consumption is shaped by their personal situation. For instance, a student with no housing costs might value free time more highly, whereas a student needing to save for college tuition might prioritize income and be less willing to trade it for leisure. These circumstances determine the relative value placed on each good.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Calculating Work Days from Free Days over a Fixed Period
Equivalence of MRT, Wage, and Opportunity Cost in the Student's Problem
The Influence of Personal Circumstances on Work-Leisure Preferences
Figure 3.10 - The Student's Ideal Plan (Optimal Choice)
Structural Analogy Between the Student's and Karim's Choice Problems
Wage Rate (w)
Unearned Income (I)
Notational Convention for Free Time (t)
Formulating the Student's Constrained Optimization Problem
Generalized Budget Constraint for the Student's Summer Break
A student has a 70-day summer break and can earn $90 per day at a summer job. The student's total earnings are used for consumption. If the student is suddenly offered a new job that pays $110 per day instead, how does this change the opportunity cost of taking one day of free time?
A student has a 70-day summer break and a job offer that pays $90 per day. The student's total earnings are their only source of funds for consumption. Given these conditions, it is possible for the student to take 30 days of free time and also achieve a total consumption of $4,000.
Evaluating Competing Summer Job Offers
Calculating Leisure Time from a Consumption Target
Analyzing the Total Cost of a Leisure Activity
Analyzing a Student's Summer Choices
A student has a 70-day summer break and a job that pays $90 per day. The student's total earnings are their only source of funds for consumption. Match each concept on the left with its correct numerical value on the right.
A student has a 10-week (70-day) summer break and a job offer that pays a daily wage of $90. The student's total earnings are their only source of funds for consumption. Which of the following equations correctly represents the relationship between the student's total consumption (c) and the number of free days they take (t)?
Assessing the Feasibility of a Summer Plan
A student has a 70-day summer break and a job offer that pays $90 per day. The student's total earnings are their only source of funds for consumption. If the student's goal is to have exactly $3,600 for consumption by the end of the summer, they must take ____ days of free time.
The Budget Constraint Slope as the Negative Wage Rate and Opportunity Cost
Student's Budget Constraint with Only Work Earnings
Balancing MRS and MRT for Utility Maximization
The Student's MRT and Opportunity Cost at a $90 Daily Wage
The Economic Model of Optimal Choice: Tangency of Indifference Curve and Feasible Frontier
Learn After
Analyzing Work-Leisure Decisions
Alex supports a family and has a large mortgage payment each month. Ben is single, lives with his parents rent-free, and has no debt. Both are offered the opportunity to work an extra 10 hours per week at their jobs for additional pay. Based on their personal circumstances, which of the following statements most accurately analyzes their likely decision-making process regarding the trade-off between income and free time?
Shifting Work-Leisure Preferences
An individual who pays off their student loans and mortgage, thereby eliminating their largest monthly expenses, will likely become more willing to substitute their free time for additional income.
Evaluating Responses to a Wage Increase
Match each individual's personal circumstance to the most likely description of their preference in the trade-off between earning more income and having more free time.
A recent graduate with substantial student loan debt is offered two jobs with the same responsibilities. Job A offers a higher salary but requires 60 hours of work per week. Job B offers a lower salary but a standard 40-hour work week. Due to their financial situation, the graduate is more likely to value the additional ________ offered by Job A over the additional free time offered by Job B.
An individual's financial situation significantly influences their willingness to trade free time for additional income. Consider the following four life stages. Arrange these stages in the correct order, starting with the stage where an individual is most likely to prioritize free time, to the stage where they are most likely to prioritize earning additional income.
Two friends, Maria and Chloe, graduate from the same program and receive identical job offers. Maria has significant student debt and helps support her family financially. Chloe has no debt and her living expenses are subsidized by her family. Both are offered a promotion that includes a 20% salary increase in exchange for working an additional 15 hours per week. Maria accepts the promotion, while Chloe declines it. Which of the following statements provides the most accurate analysis of their different choices based on their personal circumstances?
Critiquing a Workplace Observation