Suppose that lowskilled workers employed in clearing woodland can each clear one acre per month if each
Question:
Suppose that low‐skilled workers employed in clearing woodland can each clear one acre per month if each is equipped with a shovel, a machete, and a chainsaw. Clearing one acre brings in $1,000 in revenue. Each worker’s equipment costs the worker’s employer $150 per month to rent and each worker toils 40 hours per week for four weeks each month.
a. What is the marginal revenue product of hiring one low‐skilled worker to clear woodland for one month?
b. How much revenue per hour does each worker bring in?
c. If the minimum wage were $6.20, would the revenue per hour in part b exceed the minimum wage? If so, by how much per hour?
d. Now consider the employer’s total costs. These include the equipment costs as well as a normal profit of $50 per acre. If the firm pays workers the minimum wage of $6.20 per hour, what will the firm’s economic profit or loss be per acre?
e. At what value would the minimum wage have to be set so that the firm would make zero economic profit from employing an additional low‐skilled worker to clear woodland?
Step by Step Answer:
Microeconomics Principles, Problems and Policies
ISBN: 978-1259450242
20th edition
Authors: Campbell R. McConnell, Stanley L. Brue, Sean Masaki Flynn