Chapter 4: Problem 3
Why is a living wage considered a price floor? Does imposing a living wage have the same outcome as a minimum wage?
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Chapter 4: Problem 3
Why is a living wage considered a price floor? Does imposing a living wage have the same outcome as a minimum wage?
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Which of the following changes in the financial market will lead to an increase in the quantity of loans made and received: a. a rise in demand b. a fall in demand c. a rise in supply d. a fall in supply
Whether the product market or the labor market, what happens to the equilibrium price and quantity for each of the four possibilities: increase in demand, decrease in demand, increase in supply, and decrease in supply.
Name some factors that can cause a shift in the demand curve in labor markets.
Imagine that to preserve the traditional way of life in small fishing villages, a government decides to impose a price floor that will guarantee all fishermen a certain price for their catch. a. Using the demand and supply framework, predict the effects on the price, quantity demanded, and quantity supplied. b. With the enactment of this price floor for fish, what are some of the likely unintended consequences in the market? c. Suggest some policies other than the price floor to make it possible for small fishing villages to continue.
Under what circumstances would a minimum wage be a nonbinding price floor? Under what circumstances would a living raise be a binding price floor?
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