| (Problem 1a). Leandro has 16 hours per day that he can allocate
to work or leisure. His job pays a wage rate of $20. Leandro
decides to consume 8 hours of leisure. His indifference curves have
the usual shape: they slope downward, they do not cross, and they
have the characteristic convex shape. Draw Leandro's time allocation budget line for a typical day, with income on the vertical axis and hours of leisure on the horizontal axis. Then illustrate the indifference curve at his optimal choice. Based on the graph, choose the correct statement. |
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(Problem 1a). Leandro has 16 hours per day that he can allocate to work or leisure....
(Problem 1d). Leandro has 16 hours per day that he can allocate to work or leisure. His job pays a wage rate of $20. Leandro decides to consume 8 hours of leisure. His indifference curves have the usual shape: they slope downward, they do not cross, and they have the characteristic convex shape. Draw Leandro's time allocation budget line for a typical day, with income on the vertical axis and hours of leisure on the horizontal axis. Leandro's decision to...
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....
Suppose you have 24 hours per day that you can allocate between leisure and working (i) Draw the budget constraint between “leisure hours” on the horizontal axis and “wage income” on the vertical when the wage rate is $40 per hour. Mark an optimum point A that is meaningful. Draw a new budget constraint when the wage rate falls to $30 per hour. Show a new optimum point B. (ii) On your indifference curve diagram, decompose the effect of the...
Part II Suppose that Chilhong's total time endowment is 24 hours and the given wage rate is W 10,000 per hour. Draw Chilhong's budget line in a diagram with leisure and labor supply on the horizontal axis and income per day on the vertical axis. Say Chilhong chooses to earn W 100,000 per day. How much is Chilhong's leisure at the equilibrium? 1. 2. How much is Chilhong's labor supply at the equilibrium? Now suppose there is a negative income...
(6) Geo's utility function is described as LeY, where Le is hours of leisure per day, and Y is disposable income per day. Geo is employed in a job with a wage of $20 per hour and has 10 hours per day that he can spend in either working or leisure. His income from working is his only source of disposable income. He does not receive any non-wage income Geo can work as many hours as he chooses, up to...
Michael has a total of 400 monthly hours that he can allocate between work and leisure. His utility function is: U(C,L) = C1/2L1/2. This utility function implies that marginal utilities are given by MUL = (1/2)C1/2L−1/2 and MUC = (1/2)C−1/2L1/2. Michael can work any number of hours at a wage of $20. Michael has no non-labour income. (a) How many hours will Michael choose to work? Illustrate your answer in a graph. (b) The government introduces a welfare program to...
Flanders is an exceptional runner. Usually, the more he runs, the better he feels. However, he hits a “wall” after running for two hours. That is, once he runs for two hours, additional time spent running makes him worse off. After three hours of running he gets a “second wind” and running becomes enjoyable again. Flanders has eight free hours a day. Draw Flanders’s budget line between hours spent running (measured on the horizontal axis) and hours spent on other...
(10) A person earns a wage $10 per hour and has 100 hours per week to allocate between leisure and work. At the $10 wage, the person chooses to consume 65 hours of leisure per week. a. Draw the labor-leisure graph showing the situation described above. Make sure to label all intercepts, axis, and relevant slopes in your graph. b.The wage increases to $15 per hour. Assume the substitution effect exceeds the income effect. Show on your graph whether the person works more...
Question 2: in the figure below you can find two budget constraints and two indifference curves for Dan. Initially, Dan's hourly wage is $10, and he chooses bundle A on IC1, and enjoys 13 hours of leisure. When the wage increases to $12, he prefers bundle B on IC2, and enjoys 11 hours of leisure In a manner similar to Figure 2.7 on page 27 of the textbook, draw the income effect and substitution effect for leisure when the wage...
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...