True or False: The economic behavior of U.S. workers in the 20th century, who experienced a significant rise in real wages, demonstrated a clear preference for maximizing leisure time over increasing income, a choice that aligns perfectly with one of the two extreme outcomes in a hypothetical labor-leisure model.
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An economic model presents two extreme choices for a population experiencing a sixfold increase in real wages: (1) work the same number of hours to achieve a sixfold increase in income, or (2) work one-sixth the hours to maintain the original income level while maximizing leisure. How does the actual economic outcome in the United States during the 20th century, under similar wage growth, relate to this model?
Policy Evaluation for Future Economic Growth
Hypothetical vs. Historical Economic Choices
Evaluating Economic Choices: Income vs. Leisure
A hypothetical economic model explores how a worker might respond to a sixfold increase in their hourly wage. Match each potential response with its corresponding outcome for income and leisure.
True or False: The economic behavior of U.S. workers in the 20th century, who experienced a significant rise in real wages, demonstrated a clear preference for maximizing leisure time over increasing income, a choice that aligns perfectly with one of the two extreme outcomes in a hypothetical labor-leisure model.
Predicting National Economic Behavior
In the 20th century, the U.S. experienced a more than sixfold increase in real hourly wages. The population responded not by maximizing income nor by maximizing leisure, but by achieving a fourfold increase in annual income while also increasing their free time by nearly 20%. What does this historical outcome most strongly imply about the population's preferences regarding additional income and leisure?
Model vs. Reality: The Labor-Leisure Trade-off
Applying Historical Economic Behavior to a Personal Decision