Answer:
Hilary is a retired teacher who lives in Miami and does some consulting work for extra cash. At a wage of $50 per hour, she is willing to work 10 hours per week. At $65 per hour, she is willing to work 19 hours per week.
Using the midpoint method, the elasticity of Hilary’s labor supply between the wages of $50 and $65 per hour is approximately 2.37 , which means that Hilary’s supply of labor over this wage range is elastic.
Explanation:
Midpoint elasticity = (Change in labor supplied / Average labor supplied) / (Change in wage rate / Average wage rate)
= [(19 - 10) / (19 + 10) / 2] / [$(65 - 50) / $(65 + 50) / 2]
= [9 / (29 / 2)] / [15 / (115 / 2)]
= (9 / 14.5) / (15 / 57.5)
= 0.62/0.26
Midpoint elasticity = 2.37
Once elasticity is greater than 1, supply of labor is Elastic.
Answer:
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Have an interest in furthering your education.
Answer:
Ke 0.08690 = 8.69%
Explanation:
<u>The capital assets price model formula(CAPM) is as follows:</u>
risk free = 4% = 4/100 = 0.04
market rate = 11% = 11/100 = 0. 11
premium market: (market rate - risk free) = (0.11-0.04) = 0.07
Beta(non diversifiable risk) 0.67
Ke 0.08690
I’m not sure but I believe it’s flat (I haven’t heard of flat before)