Chapter 4: Problem 17
How do economists define equilibrium in financial markets?
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Chapter 4: Problem 17
How do economists define equilibrium in financial markets?
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Why are the factors that shift the demand for a product different from the factors that shift the demand for labor? Why are the factors that shift the supply of a product different from those that shift the supply of labor?
Predict how each of the following events will raise or lower the equilibrium wage and quantity of oil workers in Texas. In each case, sketch a demand and supply diagram to illustrate your answer. a. The price of oil rises. b. New oil-drilling equipment is invented that is cheap and requires few workers to run. c. Several major companies that do not drill oil open factories in Texas, offering many well-paid jobs outside the oil industry. d. Government imposes costly new regulations to make oil-drilling a safer job.
Suppose that a \(5 \%\) increase in the minimum wage causes a \(5 \%\) reduction in employment. How would this affect employers and how would it affect workers? In your opinion, would this be a good policy?
Select the correct answer. A price ceiling will usually shift: a. demand b. supply c. both d. neither
What is the "price" commonly called in the labor market?
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