Deck 19: Labor and Entrepreneurship the Human Inputs

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Question
All other things being equal, an increase in the supply of labor will lead to a fall in the wage.
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Question
One of the most significant developments in labor supply in recent times is the increase in the labor force participation of married women.
Question
Average real wages have not risen significantly since approximately 1973.
Question
Rising productivity usually reduces workers' standards of living.
Question
A worker's marginal revenue product depends upon his average product.
Question
The demand for labor is a derived demand.
Question
Money spent on college tuition is considered human capital by economists.
Question
The relationship between the quantity of labor supplied and the wage is governed by an income effect and a substitution effect.
Question
The marginal revenue product is the extra revenue the firm receives by selling one more unit of output.
Question
Marginal revenue product is the extra revenue the firm receives by hiring one additional unit of input.
Question
History has shown that over the long run, labor-saving technology has actually not reduced employment.
Question
Over the last 30 years, the income gap between the rich and the poor has declined.
Question
If the MRP of labor is below the wage rate, the firm should lay off workers.
Question
A person's decision to supply a certain amount of labor in a week is simultaneously a decision to consume a certain amount of leisure per week.
Question
The majority of new jobs created in the service sector of the U.S.economy have been in the information sector.
Question
There is only a small difference in wages between college graduates and workers who did not attend college.
Question
Innovation that improves machinery, power sources and other capital equipment will increase the demand for labor in the short run.
Question
Labor markets are generally perfectly competitive markets.
Question
Agriculture is a sector of the economy where increased productivity has been accompanied by a significant decrease in employment.
Question
The income effect of higher wages leads workers to want to work more.
Question
The income effect is thought to offset the substitution effect among very high wage earners.
Question
If the income effect of a change in the wage dominates the substitution effect, then workers will want to work more when the wage increases.
Question
The substitution effect is thought to dominate the behavior of low-wage workers.
Question
Spending on an education is considered an investment because it involves a sacrifice of current income for higher expected future income.
Question
One implication of human capital theory is that college graduates should earn substantially less than high school graduates.
Question
The substitution effect makes workers want to work less when the wage increases.
Question
Expenditures for attending college can be viewed as an investment in human capital.
Question
In reality, there is not one labor market, but many.
Question
The monetary return on a college education is considered economic rent.
Question
The supply of workers in an industry is influenced by the available working population and the nonmonetary attractiveness of the job.
Question
The quantity of labor supplied is dependent on the size of the working population and the wage rate.
Question
Since women earn less on average than men, we would expect that the substitution effect of a wage change would be more likely to dominate for women and the income effect would be more likely to dominate for men.
Question
Earnings of some highly skilled or highly specialized persons can be classified as economic rents.
Question
An investment in yourself is an investment in what economists call human capital.
Question
Wages are comparatively low in markets where demand for labor is low and supply is high.
Question
Economic rents can lead to large wage differentials.
Question
Wages will tend to be high in labor markets where supply is relatively high and demand is relatively weak.
Question
Anything that influences a good's price or the marginal physical product of labor will influence wages.
Question
An individual's supply curve is backward bending.
Question
The salary of an athlete like Peyton Manning is in part a reward for his unique ability-something economists call economic rent.
Question
Union membership was relatively low during the Great Depression.
Question
Wages in American industry are very high because of wage laws.
Question
The argument that the minimum wage law has significantly increased teenage unemployment is not supported by recent statistical analysis.
Question
Over 50 percent of all U.S.workers now belong to unions.
Question
Recent data and analysis confirms that minimum wage laws have significantly increased teenage unemployment.
Question
Teenagers generally have high marginal revenue products because they have not completed their educations and have little job experience.
Question
Teenage unemployment rates tend to be substantially higher than the overall unemployment rate.
Question
College graduates now earn nearly five times as much as their high school-educated peers but the gap is falling.
Question
The primary reason unionization in the United States has been declining is the shift of the U.S.labor force into service industries and out of manufacturing.
Question
Less than 13 percent of U.S.workers belong to unions.
Question
College graduates now earn nearly twice as much as their high school-educated peers and that gap is increasing.
Question
Unionism is much more prevalent in the United States than in other industrialized countries.
Question
Recent studies suggest that a rise in the minimum wage results in a substantial cut in the demand for teen labor.
Question
The government enacted minimum wage legislation to protect skilled workers.
Question
In the view of human capital theorists, educational institutions are factories that take less productive workers as their raw materials and create more productive workers as output.
Question
A labor union is an organization representing workers in negotiations with employers over wages, benefits, and working conditions.
Question
Union membership in the United States has fallen compared to what it was in the 1950s.
Question
Teenage unemployment rates have consistently been much higher than the overall unemployment rate and black teenagers have fared worse than white teenagers.
Question
After Hurricane Katrina, construction wages in New Orleans rose partly because of the loss of a working population.
Question
The real minimum wage has increased significantly over the last 40 years.
Question
A bilateral monopoly is a market situation in which there is only one buyer and only one seller.
Question
A monopsony is a market situation in which there is only one seller.
Question
The increasing share of women in the labor force may have contributed to the decrease in unionization.
Question
In the U.S.the total amount of work time lost to strikes is less than the amount of work time lost for coffee breaks.
Question
Union members earn about the same wage level as nonunion members in the same industry.
Question
A monopsony is a market situation in which there is only one buyer.
Question
One effect of having access to cheap foreign goods can be to raise workers' real wages.
Question
In comparison to the U.S., Germany has a relatively low percentage of union membership.
Question
Unions can only achieve wage gains by sacrificing employment.
Question
The United Automobile Workers union can select the most favorable point on the demand curve for labor and the auto manufacturing companies can do nothing in response.
Question
Collective bargaining is a process used by unions and management to settle upon the terms of a labor contract.
Question
A union acts like a monopoly seller of labor.
Question
The relationship between professional basketball players and the owners' association is an example of a bilateral monopoly.
Question
Since a union represents individuals rather than firms, it cannot be considered a monopoly.
Question
Firms use collective bargaining to set higher market prices for their products.
Question
With a monopsony in the labor market, a union can often raise wages and the number of workers hired.
Question
Unions often have the power to push wages above competitive levels.
Question
Union leaders who focus on increasing the size of their union will be aggressive in demanding higher wages.
Question
American unions came under increasing pressure in the 1950s because of stronger competition both at home and abroad.
Question
Union leaders who focus on increasing the size of their union will generally accept a wage just above the competitive level.
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Deck 19: Labor and Entrepreneurship the Human Inputs
1
All other things being equal, an increase in the supply of labor will lead to a fall in the wage.
True
2
One of the most significant developments in labor supply in recent times is the increase in the labor force participation of married women.
True
3
Average real wages have not risen significantly since approximately 1973.
True
4
Rising productivity usually reduces workers' standards of living.
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5
A worker's marginal revenue product depends upon his average product.
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Unlock for access to all 267 flashcards in this deck.
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6
The demand for labor is a derived demand.
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7
Money spent on college tuition is considered human capital by economists.
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8
The relationship between the quantity of labor supplied and the wage is governed by an income effect and a substitution effect.
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9
The marginal revenue product is the extra revenue the firm receives by selling one more unit of output.
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10
Marginal revenue product is the extra revenue the firm receives by hiring one additional unit of input.
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11
History has shown that over the long run, labor-saving technology has actually not reduced employment.
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12
Over the last 30 years, the income gap between the rich and the poor has declined.
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13
If the MRP of labor is below the wage rate, the firm should lay off workers.
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14
A person's decision to supply a certain amount of labor in a week is simultaneously a decision to consume a certain amount of leisure per week.
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15
The majority of new jobs created in the service sector of the U.S.economy have been in the information sector.
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k this deck
16
There is only a small difference in wages between college graduates and workers who did not attend college.
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17
Innovation that improves machinery, power sources and other capital equipment will increase the demand for labor in the short run.
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18
Labor markets are generally perfectly competitive markets.
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19
Agriculture is a sector of the economy where increased productivity has been accompanied by a significant decrease in employment.
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20
The income effect of higher wages leads workers to want to work more.
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21
The income effect is thought to offset the substitution effect among very high wage earners.
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22
If the income effect of a change in the wage dominates the substitution effect, then workers will want to work more when the wage increases.
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23
The substitution effect is thought to dominate the behavior of low-wage workers.
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24
Spending on an education is considered an investment because it involves a sacrifice of current income for higher expected future income.
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25
One implication of human capital theory is that college graduates should earn substantially less than high school graduates.
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26
The substitution effect makes workers want to work less when the wage increases.
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27
Expenditures for attending college can be viewed as an investment in human capital.
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28
In reality, there is not one labor market, but many.
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29
The monetary return on a college education is considered economic rent.
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k this deck
30
The supply of workers in an industry is influenced by the available working population and the nonmonetary attractiveness of the job.
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k this deck
31
The quantity of labor supplied is dependent on the size of the working population and the wage rate.
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k this deck
32
Since women earn less on average than men, we would expect that the substitution effect of a wage change would be more likely to dominate for women and the income effect would be more likely to dominate for men.
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Unlock for access to all 267 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
33
Earnings of some highly skilled or highly specialized persons can be classified as economic rents.
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k this deck
34
An investment in yourself is an investment in what economists call human capital.
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k this deck
35
Wages are comparatively low in markets where demand for labor is low and supply is high.
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36
Economic rents can lead to large wage differentials.
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37
Wages will tend to be high in labor markets where supply is relatively high and demand is relatively weak.
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k this deck
38
Anything that influences a good's price or the marginal physical product of labor will influence wages.
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k this deck
39
An individual's supply curve is backward bending.
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40
The salary of an athlete like Peyton Manning is in part a reward for his unique ability-something economists call economic rent.
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k this deck
41
Union membership was relatively low during the Great Depression.
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42
Wages in American industry are very high because of wage laws.
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k this deck
43
The argument that the minimum wage law has significantly increased teenage unemployment is not supported by recent statistical analysis.
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k this deck
44
Over 50 percent of all U.S.workers now belong to unions.
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45
Recent data and analysis confirms that minimum wage laws have significantly increased teenage unemployment.
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k this deck
46
Teenagers generally have high marginal revenue products because they have not completed their educations and have little job experience.
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k this deck
47
Teenage unemployment rates tend to be substantially higher than the overall unemployment rate.
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k this deck
48
College graduates now earn nearly five times as much as their high school-educated peers but the gap is falling.
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k this deck
49
The primary reason unionization in the United States has been declining is the shift of the U.S.labor force into service industries and out of manufacturing.
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k this deck
50
Less than 13 percent of U.S.workers belong to unions.
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k this deck
51
College graduates now earn nearly twice as much as their high school-educated peers and that gap is increasing.
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k this deck
52
Unionism is much more prevalent in the United States than in other industrialized countries.
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k this deck
53
Recent studies suggest that a rise in the minimum wage results in a substantial cut in the demand for teen labor.
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k this deck
54
The government enacted minimum wage legislation to protect skilled workers.
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k this deck
55
In the view of human capital theorists, educational institutions are factories that take less productive workers as their raw materials and create more productive workers as output.
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Unlock for access to all 267 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
A labor union is an organization representing workers in negotiations with employers over wages, benefits, and working conditions.
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k this deck
57
Union membership in the United States has fallen compared to what it was in the 1950s.
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k this deck
58
Teenage unemployment rates have consistently been much higher than the overall unemployment rate and black teenagers have fared worse than white teenagers.
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k this deck
59
After Hurricane Katrina, construction wages in New Orleans rose partly because of the loss of a working population.
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k this deck
60
The real minimum wage has increased significantly over the last 40 years.
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k this deck
61
A bilateral monopoly is a market situation in which there is only one buyer and only one seller.
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62
A monopsony is a market situation in which there is only one seller.
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63
The increasing share of women in the labor force may have contributed to the decrease in unionization.
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k this deck
64
In the U.S.the total amount of work time lost to strikes is less than the amount of work time lost for coffee breaks.
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k this deck
65
Union members earn about the same wage level as nonunion members in the same industry.
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k this deck
66
A monopsony is a market situation in which there is only one buyer.
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Unlock for access to all 267 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
67
One effect of having access to cheap foreign goods can be to raise workers' real wages.
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Unlock for access to all 267 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
In comparison to the U.S., Germany has a relatively low percentage of union membership.
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k this deck
69
Unions can only achieve wage gains by sacrificing employment.
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k this deck
70
The United Automobile Workers union can select the most favorable point on the demand curve for labor and the auto manufacturing companies can do nothing in response.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Collective bargaining is a process used by unions and management to settle upon the terms of a labor contract.
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Unlock for access to all 267 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
A union acts like a monopoly seller of labor.
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k this deck
73
The relationship between professional basketball players and the owners' association is an example of a bilateral monopoly.
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k this deck
74
Since a union represents individuals rather than firms, it cannot be considered a monopoly.
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k this deck
75
Firms use collective bargaining to set higher market prices for their products.
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Unlock for access to all 267 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
76
With a monopsony in the labor market, a union can often raise wages and the number of workers hired.
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k this deck
77
Unions often have the power to push wages above competitive levels.
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k this deck
78
Union leaders who focus on increasing the size of their union will be aggressive in demanding higher wages.
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k this deck
79
American unions came under increasing pressure in the 1950s because of stronger competition both at home and abroad.
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k this deck
80
Union leaders who focus on increasing the size of their union will generally accept a wage just above the competitive level.
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Unlock for access to all 267 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
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