--%>

Labor and Diminishing Returns

All else equal, employees will eventually be less productive: (w) the greater is the amount of physical capital. (x) when they receive more certain training and less general knowledge. (y) if the wage rate is increased. (z) as more and more people are put on an assembly line.

How can I solve my Economics problem? Please suggest me the correct answer.

   Related Questions in Managerial Economics

  • Q : Competitive Market Supplies of Labor

    The supply curve of labor which confronts a large but purely competitive industry is usually: (1) horizontal. (2) positively sloped. (3) backward bending. (4) vertical. (5) negatively sloped. Can a

  • Q : Tax when price elasticity of

    When the ratio of the price elasticity of demand of a taxed good associate to its price elasticity of supply increases, tax is: (w) revenue will fall when tax rates are raised. (x) hikes will cause buyer's total outla

  • Q : Explain the reasons for demand curve

    Explain the reasons for demand curve slopes downward.

  • Q : Explain the forecasting demand for a

    Explain the forecasting demand for a new product.

  • Q : Individual firm in purely competitive

    A purely competitive resource market shows that an individual firm faces a resource supply curve which is: (w) perfectly inelastic. (x) perfectly elastic. (y) downward sloping. (z) backward bending.

    Q : Labor Supplies in Competitive Markets

    The individual firm in a purely competitive labor market: (1) faces a perfectly elastic supply of labor at the equilibrium wage. (2) faces a perfectly inelastic supply of labor at the equilibrium wage. (3) has a perfectly elastic demand for labor at t

  • Q : Functions and responsibilities of

    States the functions and responsibilities of managerial economist?

  • Q : Explain the decision making areas of

    Explain the decision making areas of the decision making.

  • Q : Pure economic rents Pure economic rents

    Pure economic rents for different parcels of land do not reflect differences within their: (1) marginal productivities. (2) fertility. (3) quantities of valuable minerals and ores. (4) amounts of capital improvements. (5) relative capability to reduce

  • Q : Negative Relationship in Demand for

    The demand curve for labor can be demonstrated as a negative relationship between: (w) the quantity of labor demanded and the wage rate. (x) labor productivity and the quantity of labor used. (y) employment and output. (z) wages and GDP.