--%>

High poverty rate among not employed

The high poverty rate in between those who do not work: (w) reflects voluntary choices for leisure over income and work. (x) is no cause for concern if it involves voluntary choice. (y) occurs since family responsibilities prevent many people from working. (z) suggests a correlation between unemployment and poverty.

Can anybody suggest me the proper explanation for given problem regarding Economics generally?

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Capitalization in expected income

    Capitalization is the process whereby wealth is produced and after that recognized when: (1) financial institutions transform households’ saving in economic investment. (2) asset prices are adjusted through market forces to reflect the present v

  • Q : Determine demand and supply when

    If, throughout a period while video iPods are gaining popularity, the technology to create them enhances, in that case demand: (w) and supply would both decrease. (x) and supply would both increase.  (y) increases when supply decreases. (z) decreases when supply

  • Q : Derived Demand for Labor in competition

    The faddish popularity of Atkins and South Beach diets both, and both of that advise dieters to eat more meat and to decrease the intake of starchy carbohydrates, most likely decreased incomes most sharply for: (1) grocery store clerks. (2) cattle ran

  • Q : Pure competition market A purely

    A purely competitive market would NOT be illustrated by: (1) many potential buyers and sellers. (2) each buyer or seller being a price taker. (3) an absence of long-run barriers to entry or exit. (4) aggressive advertising to compare brands. (5) a sin

  • Q : Market demand function The market  for

    The market  for good X consists  of 2 consumers. consumer  1',s demand  for good X is: X1 :  15 - 3Px + 0.5PY + .02I1I1 and I2 a

  • Q : Changing in strategy and behaviour

    Within the kinked demand curve model, when one firm: (1) advertises better quality, its rivals will do nothing. (2) raises its price, its rivals will also increase prices. (3) increases its output level, when its rivals will do nothing. (4) lowers its

  • Q : Third degree price discrimination Firm

    Firm A has no costs of production and sells its products to just two buyers. The buyers (1 and 2) have the following demand functions: P1 = 90 -10q1 P2 = 60 - 5q2 (a) Assuming that the rm can engage in third degree price discrimination, nd the

  • Q : Constant cost industry with no barriers

    When consumers eventually cannot distinguish one roasted chicken dinner from other, while roasted chicken dinners are produced into a constant cost industry, and when no barriers to entry or exit exist, so this firm’s lo

  • Q : Output at unitary price elasticity

    Babble-On maintains world-wide patents for software which translates any of 314 spoken languages into text, along with automatic audio and text translations into some of the other three-hundred-thirteen languages. Facing Babble-On the demand curve has unitary

  • Q : Demands and supplies of most goods

    Since longer time intervals are considered, then demands and supplies of most of the goods become: (i) Increasingly independent. (ii) Less subject to the adjustments through buyers and sellers. (iii) Flatter (that is, quantities adjust more fully to p