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Income (dollars per Lo L L2 Hours of lcisure Figure 1 A consu above as point...
Labor Economics
1. In the leisure-income model, the wage constraint shows a. the points that maximize a worker's utility b. all points that are equally preferred c. the wage rates that affect work decisions d. the available combinations of leisure and income 2. The slope of a wage constraint reflects the: a. rate at which a person is willing to substitute leisure for income c. income effect b. price of leisure d. substitution effect 3. When a worker maximizes her...
INCOME (Dollars) Kate has 80 hours per week to devote to working or to leisure. She is paid an hourly wage and can work at her job as many hours a week as she likes. The following graph illustrates Kate's weekly income-lelsure tradeoff. The three lines labeled BC, BC, and BC illustrate her time allocation budget at three different wages; points A, B, and C show her optimal time allocation choices along each of these constralints BC 1200 BC 800...
Labor Economics, multiple choice questions
1. In the leisure-income model, the wage constraint shows a. the points that maximize a worker's utility b. all points that are equally preferred c. the wage rates that affect work decisions d. the available combinations of leisure and income 2. The slope of a wage constraint reflects the: a. rate at which a person is willing to substitute leisure for income c. income effect b. price of leisure d. substitution effect 3. When a...
6. On a standard income-leisure diagram, Tony has flatter indifference curves than Bruce, but both are negatively sloped. It is probably true that: a. Both like leisure and income, but Bruce values leisure relatively more than Tony does. b. Bruce likes leisure but dislikes income while Tony likes both c. Bruce likes income but dislikes leisure while Tony likes both d. Tony values leisure more highly compared to income than Bruce does 7. As an individual’s wage rate gets higher,...
Leisure-labour choice 1. Mr. Cog works in a machine factory. He can work as many hours per day as he wishes at a wage rate of w. Let C be the number of dollars he spends on consumer goods and let R be the number of hours of leisure that he chooses. (a) Mr. Cog earns $8 an hour and has 18 hours per day to devote to labor or leisure, and he has $16 of nonlabor income per day....
1. Janet's utility depends on consumption c and leisure l. She earns a wage equal to w per hour, has an investment income equal to M(greater than or equal to) 0 and needs to sleep at least 8 hours a night. Normalize the price of consumption goods at $1. (i) Draw her indifference curves between hours of leisure and consumption, her budget line and her equilibrium choice of c and l. What is the slope of the budget line and...
Question 1 (1 point) (1 Point) We assume that the representative consumer's preferences exhibit the properties that Oa) they evolve over time and that more is always preferred to less. Ob) more is sometimes preferred to less and that consumption and leisure are both normal goods c) more is preferred to less and that the consumer prefers diversity d) the consumer likes diversity and that more is sometimes preferred to less. Question 2 (1 point) (1 Point) A good is...
Italian Sub Italian Sub Taco Taco Taco Quantity MU MU MU/$4 10 MU/$2 15 MU/$1 30 40 30 2 32 8 24 12 8 24 16 3 20 16 12 - 12 - 5 3 1.5 0.5 5 6 6 2 8 4 6 4 2 12 8 4 - Refer to the table, which lists the values of Harry Taber's marginal utility and marginal utility per dollar for Italian submarine (sub) sandwiches and tacos. Assume that the price of...
Problem 3-20 Various CVP Questions: Break-Even Point: Cost Structure: Target Sales [LO 3-1, LO 3-3, LO 3-4. LO 3-5. LO 3-6. LO 3-8] Northwood Company manufactures basketballs. The company has a ball that sells for $49. At present, the ball is manufactured in a small plant that relies heavily on direct labor workers. Thus, variable expenses are high, totaling $34.30 per ball, of which 70% is direct labor cost. Last year, the company sold 58,000 of these balls with the...
Speaking: Raed Saeed (Host) Pizza B1 QN 1. John has an income of 800 dollars per week, which he can split between consumption of pizza and coke (Figure 1). The price of pizza is currently $10, while coke costs $8. At these prices, he divides his income between the two goods such that his optimal consumption point is at point K (with 45 coke) shown on original budget line Bo. Suppose that the price of pizza decreases to $8, so...