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Used Car Market Signalling Strategy
Analyze whether the dealership's warranty strategy will result in an outcome where the two types of cars are clearly distinguished by the choice to offer a warranty. In your analysis, calculate the net profit for the seller of each type of car under both choices (offering the warranty vs. not offering it) and explain why this leads to the specific outcome.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
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A firm wants to hire new employees and knows that there are two types of workers: high-productivity and low-productivity. High-productivity workers will generate $100,000 in value, while low-productivity workers will generate $50,000. The firm cannot tell the workers apart before hiring them. Obtaining a professional certification is a possible way for workers to signal their type. The cost of obtaining this certification is $20,000 for a high-productivity worker but $60,000 for a low-productivity worker. The firm decides to offer a wage of $100,000 to workers with the certification and $50,000 to those without. Given this situation, what is the most likely outcome?
Used Car Market Signalling Strategy
Consider a market where a buyer wants to distinguish between high-quality and low-quality sellers. Sellers can choose to offer a product warranty as a signal of their quality. The cost of offering this warranty is $3,000 for a high-quality seller but $7,000 for a low-quality seller. The buyer, observing the warranty, is willing to pay a price premium of $8,000 for products that come with it. In this situation, a separating equilibrium will occur where only high-quality sellers choose to offer the warranty.
Calculating the Signalling Cost Boundary
Critique of a Flawed Signalling Strategy
In a labor market model where potential employees signal their productivity to a firm by acquiring an educational degree, match each element of the model to its correct description. The goal is to achieve an outcome where the firm can distinguish between high and low-productivity workers.
A firm is trying to distinguish between high-productivity and low-productivity job applicants. A university degree can serve as a signal. Arrange the following events in the logical order that leads to an outcome where the firm can successfully identify each type of worker based on their choice to get a degree.
In a scenario where an informed party (e.g., a job applicant) wants to convey their 'type' (e.g., high-productivity) to an uninformed party (e.g., an employer), they can use a costly action (e.g., obtaining a certification). For this action to successfully reveal the applicant's true type, the cost must be low enough for the high-productivity type to justify the resulting benefit, but high enough to deter the low-productivity type. When these conditions are met and the two types choose different actions, allowing the employer to distinguish between them, the resulting outcome is called a ____ equilibrium.
Designing an Insurance Market Solution
Analysis of Signalling Effectiveness