Answer: Unemployment insurance decreases frictional unemployment.
Explanation:
FRICTIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT
This is unemployment caused by people moving from one job to another. It is temporary and is part of the natural rate of unemployment.
Unemployment insurance does not reduce unemployment because to get unemployment insurance you have to be just that, unemployed. An unemployed person getting unemployment insurance is still unemployed.
Perhaps more concerning is that unemployment insurance might actually increase frictional unemployment. With people getting Unemployment Insurance they might take longer finding a job that they 'feel' suits them, in other words they become selective because they have a financial cushion to fall back on.
Answer: c. Moved away from a strictly rational reasoning model for rational thought.
Recently, the rational choice theory has been criticized for leaving out some important factors that might influence the choices people make. Institutions and uncertainty can lead people to make a choice they would not have made under unconstrained circumstances solely dependent on reason. Therefore, new concepts have arisen, such as the "bounded rationality" idea. This is an attempt to recognize the limits that rationality has in real life.
Some works that have dealt with this problematic are: <em>Pathologies of Rational Choice Theory</em> (Green and Shapiro, 1994) and <em>Neuropolitics</em> (William E. Connolly, 2002).
Answer: I believe it is Puerto Rico. :) brainliest?