--%>

Statement of Featherbedding

I have a problem in economics on Resources and Products Flow Model. Please help me in the following question. The featherbedding is: (1) Practiced through only migratory ducks and geese. (2) Practiced through female song birds on each spring. (3) Increasingly substituted through water-bedding. (4) The union practice intended to increase the demand for labor.

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Determine prices by maximize total

    LoCalLoCarbo that is Favorite Corporation of fad dieters, which can maximize its total revenue when this produces: (1) output q2 and charges a price equal to P1. (2) output q3 and charges a price of more than P2 althou

  • Q : Horizontal summation of individual

    The purely competitive industry’s demand for the labor is: (i) Less elastic than the horizontal summation of individual firm’s demands. (ii) Perfectly elastic. (iii) Upward sloping as of the diminishing marginal returns to labor. (iv) Equi

  • Q : Relatively elasticity in supply curve

    At point a, in below figure the supply curve into this graph: (w) perfectly elastic. (x) relatively elastic. (y) unitarily elastic. (z) relatively inelastic.

    Q : Equality between marginal revenue and

    A profit-maximizing monopolist which does not price discriminate and that faces a demand curve that is higher at some output levels than is the firm’s average variable cost curve finds out price and quantity where: (w) profit pe

  • Q : Problem Regarding to Contestable Markets

    Even though the concentration ratio for an oligopoly is close to hundred, firms may operate rather efficiently when the market: (1) price conforms to a limit pricing model. (2) is contestable since entry and exit are easy. (3) demand curve is unitaril

  • Q : Income effect of a wage Can someone

    Can someone help me in finding out the right answer from the given options. When the income effect of a wage raise is more powerful than the substitution effect, then the:  (1) Labor supply curve will be ‘backward bending’. (2) Unemployment rate will

  • Q : Profit-maximizing output for economic

    Babble-On maintains world-wide patents for software which translates any of 314 spoken languages in text, along with automatic audio and text translations within any of the other three-hundred-thirteen languages. When Babble-On produces its profit-maximizing o

  • Q : Assumption of Ceteris paribus Can

    Can someone help me in finding out the right answer from the given options. Suppose that everything except the variables we are studying remains constant or steady is termed as the: (1) Ceteris paribus assumption. (2) Ex-ante assumption. (3) Ex-post assumption. (4) Po

  • Q : Explain about federal income tax Can

    Can somebody help me to solve this query.. The federal income tax, wherein the rate rises as income increases, is taken as: (w) a progressive tax. (x) a regressive tax. (y) skewed towards the poor. (z) unfair to th

  • Q : Market supplies of labor in long run

    During the long run, the labor supply curve facing a main industry: (w) will always be positively associated to the wage rate. (x) will slope upward only when individual labor supply curves slope upward. (y) can be backward bending at very high wage r