Exam 5: Frictions in the Labor Market
Exam 1: Introduction36 Questions
Exam 2: Overview of the Labor Market36 Questions
Exam 3: The Demand for Labor35 Questions
Exam 4: Labor Demand Elasticities35 Questions
Exam 5: Frictions in the Labor Market39 Questions
Exam 6: Supply of Labor to the Economy: the Decision to Work35 Questions
Exam 7: Labor Supply: Household Production, the Family, and the Life Cycle34 Questions
Exam 8: Compensating Wage Differentials and Labor Markets35 Questions
Exam 9: Investments in Human Capital: Education and Training34 Questions
Exam 10: Worker Mobility: Migration, Immigration, and Turnover45 Questions
Exam 11: Pay and Productivity: Wage Determination Within the Firm45 Questions
Exam 12: Gender, Race, and Ethnicity in the Labor Market35 Questions
Exam 13: Unions and the Labor Market35 Questions
Exam 14: Unemployment35 Questions
Exam 15: Inequality in Earnings45 Questions
Exam 16: The Labor Market Effects of International Trade and Production Sharing35 Questions
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When a firm hires a fourth worker, its wage rate goes from $80 a worker to $90. The marginal revenue product of the fourth worker is $100. If the firm hires the fourth worker, its profits
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Correct Answer:
D
A firm could profitably pay for a worker's general training if
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Correct Answer:
C
The marginal product of a new worker is 80 units and the marginal expense of a new worker is $800. The marginal product of hiring current workers another hour is 10 units and the marginal expense of hiring current workers another hour is $12. If the firm needs extra hours of work (assuming the work could be done by either the new or current workers), it should
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Correct Answer:
A
A firm employs 10 workers at a weekly wage of $500. If it employs an eleventh worker, it has to raise all of its workers wage to $520. The eleventh worker adds $750 a week to revenues. If the firm hires the eleventh worker, its weekly profits will
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Initially, when a firm hires a fourth worker, its wage rate goes from $80 a worker to $90. The marginal revenue product of the fourth worker is $100. Then the government imposes a minimum wage of $90 a worker. If the firm now hires the fourth worker, its profits will
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The present value of a firm's earnings over two periods is equal to its earnings in the initial period plus the ________ value of its earnings in the next period, and will ________ as the interest rate rises.
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Table 5.1 Two-Period Training Model
-A profit-maximizing firm which wants to provide firm-specific training to its workers will pay ________ in the training period and ________ after training is completed. (See Table 5.1 for definitions of abbreviations.)

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Members of certain groups have the right to sue employers if discriminated against. Other things the same, then according to the model of quasi-fixed costs, this right will tend to
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Table 5.1 Two-Period Training Model
-A profit-maximizing firm which wants to train its workers during the first period CANNOT (see Table 5.1 for definitions of abbreviations)

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A firm is currently employing 10 workers. To hire an 11th worker, it must raise its weekly pay by $5 and pay the 11th worker $100. What is the marginal expense of the hiring the 11th worker?
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Policies which protect workers against "unjust dismissal" have been shown to cause
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Two employers pay a wage of $10 an hour. Employer A is a monopsony while Employer B hires in a competitive labor market. Both firms sell their output in competitive markets. Which of the following will be true?
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Which of the following is definitely NOT a quasi-fixed cost of labor?
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