--%>

Labor Contracts-Featherbedding problem

Can someone please help me in finding out the accurate answer from the following question. The restrictive work rules which need firms to employ more workers than required are termed as: (1) Feather-bedding. (2) Seniority contracts. (3) Blacklisting regulations. (4) Agency shop provisions. (5) Yellow dog contracts.

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Labor-Leisure Tradeoffs When leisure is

    When leisure is a normal good, then the demand for leisure: (i) Differs directly with the income. (ii) Has declined sharply as World War II. (iii) Is positively associated to the average age of population. (iii) Shifts left-ward as an outcome of technological advances

  • Q : Estimate price cross-elasticities of

    When the prices rise of Comfort shoes rise through two percent, causing Wonder sock sales to fall through six percent, these goods are _____, and _____ is about the cross price elasticity of demand. (1) luxuries;  6. (2) necessities; 2. (3) subst

  • Q : Decreasing price of Complementary Goods

    The increase in demand for tartar sauce would be a probable result of: (1) A reduction in the price of fish. (2) An raise in the price of tartar sauce. (3) A bumper crop of the tartar sauce. (4) A raise in the price of fish. (v) The reduction in price

  • Q : Illustrations of individuals engaged in

    Illustrations of individuals engaged in the productive activities would not comprise a: (1) Speculator who purchases wheat at harvest time and vends it at a higher price afterward. (2) Trucker who hauls the grain from North Dakota to the flour mill in

  • Q : Financial Intermediation Financial

    Financial intermediation occurs while financial institutions: (w) incur substantial outflows of funds. (x) channel flows from the ultimate lenders to the ultimate borrowers. (y) face rigid reserve requirement ratios. (z) experience "runs" when deposit

  • Q : Demand of various vegetable why demand

    why demand change of onion in during one week due to change in it's price

  • 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 : Problem on Industrial Unions I have a

    I have a problem in economics on Problem on Industrial Unions. Please help me in the following question. The United Auto Workers (or UAW) is an illustration of a(n): (1) Mechanical union. (2) Company union. (3) Craft union. (4) Industrial union.

  • Q : Reason why giant corporations dominate

    John Kenneth Galbraith refuses theories which suppose profit maximization in competitive markets. According to him, the big corporations dominate the economic activity as: (1) Corporate managers look for maximum gains for stockholders. (2) Government policies are mani

  • Q : Problem Based on Economic Rent Location

    Location or site rents are as: (w) unrelated to the geographic location of a firm in a market. (x) determined from the fertility of land. (y) generated while a firm’s location allows this to charge more for its output or to pay less for its inpu