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Utility
Utility is a numerical value assigned to a particular outcome to represent the satisfaction or value an individual places on it. When faced with a choice between feasible options, an individual will select the outcome that provides the highest utility.
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Science
Economy
CORE Econ
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Empirical Science
Economics
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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Linear Income Function vs. Concave Production Function
The Slope of the Income Function Represents the Wage Rate
Activity: Evaluating Scenarios Based on a Work-Leisure Model
Simplifying Assumptions in Karim's Work-Leisure Model
Calculating Daily Work Hours from Free Time
Constrained Choice Problem
Evaluating a Work-Consumption Goal
A student is offered a job that pays €30 per hour. Assume the student can work a maximum of 16 hours per day. If the student is currently planning to work 9 hours per day but is now considering working only 8 hours instead, what is the most accurate analysis of the direct consequence of this one-hour change in their plan?
Calculating and Interpreting the Feasible Frontier
In a model where an individual determines their daily working hours based on a fixed hourly wage, their final decision on how to balance work and free time is influenced by the work-leisure choices of their peers.
An individual can devote their 24-hour day to either free time or work, earning a wage of €20 for every hour worked. Their earnings are spent entirely on consumption. Match each potential daily outcome (a combination of free time and consumption) with its correct classification based on what is possible within these constraints.
An individual has a job offer that pays €35 per hour. They are considering their schedule for a particular day where they could work for 8 hours. If this individual chooses to take the entire 8-hour period as free time instead of working, the opportunity cost of this decision, measured in terms of potential consumption, is €____.
Imagine you are building a simple economic model to represent an individual's daily choice between earning money for consumption and enjoying free time. Arrange the following steps in the logical order required to define the individual's complete set of possible outcomes (their 'feasible set').
Analyzing a Simple Work-Leisure Model
Maria is offered a job paying €25 per hour. She can work up to a maximum of 14 hours per day, and there are 24 hours in a day. Her daily choices are limited to spending on consumption or enjoying free time. Based on this information, which of the following statements provides the most accurate analysis of Maria's situation?
Evaluating a Financial Plan
Figure 3.3: Karim's Income as a Function of Work Hours
The Role of Income in Enabling Consumption
Free Time as a Desirable Good
Hypothetical Choice of a Purely Income-Maximizing Individual
Free Time in the Work-Leisure Model
Utility
Figure E3.1: Mapping Karim's Preferences
Figure 3.6: Karim's Budget Constraint and Feasible Set
The Two Trade-Offs in Karim's Consumption-Leisure Choice
Wage as the Opportunity Cost of Free Time
The Work-Leisure Dilemma: Scarcity and Trade-offs
Disposable Income
The Two Goods in the Work-Leisure Model: Consumption and Free Time
Modeling Work-Leisure Choices over a Total Period
Scarcity in the Work-Leisure Model
Simplifying Assumption: No Saving in the Work-Leisure Model
Simplifying Assumption: No Borrowing in the Work-Leisure Model
Figure 3.5: Karim's Indifference Curves
Combining Preferences and Constraints to Determine Optimal Choice
Learn After
Indifference Between Consumption-Leisure Bundles
The Job Offer Dilemma
An individual currently works 40 hours per week. They are offered a promotion that includes a significant hourly wage increase but requires them to work 60 hours per week. Assuming this individual's standard of living is determined by both the goods they can purchase (consumption) and their amount of free time, which of the following statements most accurately analyzes their decision-making process?
In a work-leisure choice model, an individual who receives a significant increase in their hourly wage will always experience a higher overall standard of living, regardless of any change in their working hours.
Rational Choices in the Work-Leisure Model
Components of Standard of Living
An individual's overall standard of living is derived from both their consumption of goods/services and their amount of leisure time. Match each scenario with the corresponding changes to these two components.
An individual is considering two job offers. Job A offers a high salary but requires 60 hours of work per week. Job B offers a lower salary but requires only 30 hours of work per week. If the individual chooses Job B, it implies they derive greater ________ from the combination of more free time and less consumption compared to the alternative.
An individual's standard of living is determined by a combination of their consumption (the amount of goods they can buy) and their leisure (free time). Consider an individual who strongly prioritizes having more free time over having more goods. Please arrange the following weekly outcomes in order from the one that would provide this specific individual the highest standard of living (utility) to the lowest.
In a model where an individual's standard of living is determined by both consumption (funded by income) and leisure, consider a person who suddenly receives a lifetime income from a trust fund, sufficient to cover all their desired consumption needs without working. How does this fundamentally alter the person's decision-making problem regarding work?
Rationality in Work-Leisure Preferences