subject
Business, 25.01.2020 00:31 aguerobia

Job-specific human capital. in this problem, based on a simplified version of the model in bhattacharya and sood (2006), we will explore how linking employment and health insurance provision can (partially) solve the adverse selection problem if the labor market is competitive. suppose that there are two types of workers ā€“ sickly workers with probability ps of falling ill over the course of the next year, and robust workers with probability pr < ps of falling ill. employers cannot observe whether a worker is sickly or robust, and because of u. s. law they can only decide to offer health insurance to allof their workers, or none at all. we will assume that a just-hired employee is less productive than an employee who has more experience; let mpn be the marginal value product of new employees, and mpe > mpn be the marginal value product of experienced employees. in this simple model, marginal value product depends only on experience, not on whether a worker is sickly or robust.

consider an employer deciding whether to hire a new employee who will produce a marginal value product of mp. if the employer offers income and no health insurance, what wage, w, will the employer have to pay the employee in a competitive labor market? what would happen if the employer offered the employee less? what would happen if the employer offered the employee more?

d is a measure of job-specific human capital; as workers learn the job, they become more productive so d > 0. however, not every job or industry has the same value for d. in some lines of work d is low, while in others d is high, simply because of the nature of the work. given the results you have seen in this problem, in which types of industries ā€“ high-d or low-d ā€“ would you expect there to be a larger fraction of employers offering pooled health insurance to workers?

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Business

question
Business, 21.06.2019 23:30
Starting at age 30, you deposit $2000 a year into an ira account for retirement. treat the yearly deposits into the account as a continuous income stream. if money in the account earns 7%, compounded continuously, how much will be in the account 35 years later, when you retire at age 65? how much of the final amount is interest?
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 12:50
There is a small, family-owned store that sells food and household goods in a small town. the owners have good relations with the community, especially with local farmers who supply much of the food. the farmers aren't organized into a cooperative or union, and the store deals with each individually. suppose the store wanted to buy some farms to control the supply of certain vegetables. how would you classify this strategic move? select one: a. horizontal integration b. forward integration c. backward integration d. concentric integration
Answers: 2
question
Business, 22.06.2019 18:10
Ashop owner uses a reorder point approach to restocking a certain raw material. lead time is six days. usage of the material during lead time is normally distributed with a mean of 42 pounds and a standard deviation of four pounds. when should the raw material be reordered if the acceptable risk of a stockout is 3 percent?
Answers: 1
question
Business, 22.06.2019 19:20
Six years ago, an 80-kw diesel electric set cost $160,000. the cost index for this class of equipment six years ago was 187 and is now 194. the cost-capacity factor is 0.6. the plant engineering staff is considering a 120-kw unit of the same general design to power a small isolated plant. assume we want to add a precompressor, which (when isolated and estimated separately) currently costs $13291. determine the total cost of the 120-kw unit. (hint: skip $ and comma symbols)
Answers: 3
You know the right answer?
Job-specific human capital. in this problem, based on a simplified version of the model in bhattacha...
Questions
Questions on the website: 13722360