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When a farmer shifts from being a wage-earning employee to a tenant who pays a fixed rent and keeps all the crops they produce, they become the __________, meaning they have a strong incentive to increase production because they get to keep any output above the rent payment.
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Tenancy Contract in the Angela-Bruno Model
Analyzing Farmer Incentives: Wage vs. Rent
A landowner can structure a deal with a farmer in one of two ways:
- An employment contract: The landowner pays the farmer a fixed daily wage to work a specific number of hours, and the landowner keeps all the crops produced.
- A tenancy contract: The landowner charges the farmer a fixed daily rent for the land, and the farmer decides how many hours to work and keeps all the crops produced after paying the rent.
Which arrangement provides the farmer with a stronger personal financial incentive to increase the farm's total output, and why?
Consider a landowner who can either hire a worker for a fixed wage to farm the land (an employment contract) or charge the worker a fixed rent to use the land (a tenancy contract). In the event of an unexpectedly poor harvest due to bad weather, the worker bears more of the financial risk under the employment contract than under the tenancy contract.
Landowner's Choice: Employment vs. Tenancy
Landowner's Choice: Employment vs. Tenancy
Evaluating Contractual Arrangements in Agriculture
A landowner currently employs a farmer, paying a wage that is just enough to make the farmer willing to work the hours dictated by the landowner, with the landowner keeping all the output. They decide to switch to a new arrangement where the farmer pays a fixed daily rent for the land and gets to keep all the output they produce. Assuming the farmer is now responsible for choosing their own work hours, how will the farmer's work hours and the farm's total output most likely change compared to the previous arrangement?
Match each characteristic to the type of agricultural contract it best describes: an Employment Contract (where a landowner pays a fixed wage for a set number of hours) or a Tenancy Contract (where a farmer pays a fixed rent for land use).
Consider a farmer who pays a fixed daily rent to a landowner and keeps all the crops they produce. Because a portion of the value they create must go to paying this rent, the farmer has an incentive to work fewer hours than the level that would maximize the farm's total output.
When a farmer shifts from being a wage-earning employee to a tenant who pays a fixed rent and keeps all the crops they produce, they become the __________, meaning they have a strong incentive to increase production because they get to keep any output above the rent payment.
Consider a landowner who can either hire a worker for a fixed wage to farm the land (an employment contract) or charge the worker a fixed rent to use the land (a tenancy contract). In the event of an unexpectedly poor harvest due to bad weather, the worker bears more of the financial risk under the employment contract than under the tenancy contract.