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?
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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Get started for freeAre households demanders or suppliers in the goods market? Are firms demanders or suppliers in the goods market? What about the labor market and the financial market?
Select the correct answer. A price floor will usually shift: a. demand b. supply c. both d. neither Illustrate your answer with a diagram.
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.
Other than the demand for labor, what would be another example of a "derived demand?"
Identify each of the following as involving either demand or supply. Draw a circular flow diagram and label the flows A through F. (Some choices can be on both sides of the goods market.) a. Households in the labor market b. Firms in the goods market c. Firms in the financial market d. Households in the goods market e. Firms in the labor market f. Households in the financial market
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