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Chapter 11 Tutorial Labor Markets ©2000 South-Western College Publishing 1 1. Marginal revenue product measures the increase in a. output resulting from one more unit of labor. b. TR resulting from one more unit of output. c. revenue per unit from one more unit of output. d. total revenue resulting from one more unit of labor. D. MRP is the increase in total revenue to a firm resulting from hiring an additional unit of labor or other variable resource. 2 2. Troll Corporation sells dolls for $10.00 each in a market that is perfectly competitive. Increasing the number of workers from 100 to 101 would cause output to rise from 500 to 510 dolls per day. Troll should hire the 101st worker only when the wage is a. $100 or less per day. b. more than $100 per day. c. $5.10 or less per day. d. none of the above. A. Under perfect competition, the firm hires workers until the MRP equals the wage rate. MRP equals $10 x MP (510 - 500) = $100. 3 3. Derived demand for labor depends on the a. cost of factors of production used in the product. b. market supply curve of labor. c. consumer demand for the final goods produced by labor. d. firm’s total revenue less economic profit. C. If consumers do not purchase goods, there is no MRP and no workers are hired. 4 4. If demand for a product falls, the demand curve for labor used to produce the product will shift a. leftward. b. rightward. c. upward. d. downward. A. If consumers demand for a product decreases and supply remains the constant, the price of the product falls and the MRP (P x MP) decreases. 5 5. The owner of a restaurant will hire waiters if the a. additional labor’s pay is close to the minimum wage . b. marginal product is at the maximum. c. additional work of the employees adds more to total revenue than to costs. d. waiters do not belong to a union. C. If MRP exceeds the wage rate paid waiters, it is profitable for the restaurant to hire more waiters. 6 6. In a perfectly competitive market, the demand curve for labor a. slopes upward. b. slopes downward because of diminishing marginal productivity. c. is perfectly elastic at the equilibrium wage rate. d. is described by all of the above. B. As output expands in the short run, a fixed factor results in diminishing returns causing MP to decrease. Correspondingly, MRP decreases. 7 7. A union can influence the equilibrium wage rate by a. featherbedding. b. requiring longer apprenticeships. c. favoring trade restrictions on foreign products. d. all of the above. e. none of the above. D. Featherbedding and trade protectionism increase the demand for labor. Requiring longer apprenticeship decreases the demand for labor. 8 8. In which of the following market structures is the firm not a price taker in the factor market? a. Oligopoly. b. Monopsony. c. Monopoly. d. Perfect competition. B. Monopsony is a labor market in which a single firm hires labor. For example, the “company town” where everyone works for the same employer. 9 9. The extra cost of obtaining each additional unit of a factor of production is called the marginal a. physical product. b. revenue product. c. factor cost. d. implicit cost. C. The assumption of MFC is that the firm must pay a higher wage to each additional worker as well as to all previously hired workers. 10 10. A monopsonist’s marginal factor cost curve lies above its supply curve because the firm must a. increase the price of its product to sell more. b. lower the price of its product to sell more. c. increase the wage rate to hire more labor. d. lower the wage rate to hire more labor. C. The monopsonist can hire an additional worker only by raising the wage rate for all workers. Therefore, the MFC exceeds the wage rate along the labor supply curve. 11 11. In order to maximize profits, a monopsonist will hire the quantity of labor to the point where the marginal factor cost is equal to a. marginal physical product. b. marginal revenue product. c. total revenue product. d. any of the above. B. The MRP curve is the contribution of each worker to total revenue and MFC the addition to total cost. When MRP > MFC, the firm hires more workers. 12 Marginal Factor Cost (MFC) and Marginal Revenue Product (MRP) $8 $6 $4 $2 Dollars per hour $10 Surplus MFC Shortage D (MRP) Quantity of Labor 1 2 3 4 5 13 12. BigBiz, a local monopolist, currently hires 50 workers and pays them $6 per hour. To attract an additional worker to its labor force, BigBiz would have to raise the wage rate to $6.25 per hour. What is BigBiz’s marginal factor cost? a. $6.25 per hour. b. $12.50 per hour. c. $18.75 per hour. d. $20.00 per hour. C. Its total cost would increase by $18.75 to hire that additional worker (25 x 50 + 6.25). 14 13. Suppose a firm can hire 100 workers at $8.00 per hour, but must pay $8.05 per hour to hire 101 workers. Marginal factor cost (MFC) for the 101st worker is approximately equal to a. $8.00. b. $8.05. c. $13.05. d. $13.00. C. The firm’s total cost would increase $13.05 to hire the 101st worker (.05 x 100 + 8.05). 15 14. A monopsonist in equilibrium has a marginal revenue product of $10 per worker hour. Its equilibrium wage rate must be a. less than $10. b. equal to $10. c. greater than $10. d. equal to $5. A. Because of its monopoly in the labor market, a monopsony hires fewer workers and pays a lower wage than a firm in a competitive labor market. 16 A Monopsonist determines its Wage Rate $5 $3 $2 $1 Dollars per hour $4 MFC S D (MRP) Quantity of Labor 1 2 3 4 5 17 END 18