Q1. The "supply side" economics of the Regan administration (1981-1988) presumed that income tax cuts would stimulate incentives to work and thereby increases economic growth. Demonstrate this outcome with work-leisure diagram. What does this outcome assume about the relative sizes of the income and substitution effects? Explain "The predicted increase in work-incentives" associated with the supply-side tax cuts might in fact be more relevant for women than for men".
Q2. Discuss the principal-agent problem and some possible solutions.
Q3. Caught up in broad social and economic disaster that swept the Mediterranean basin during the twelfth century BCE, what seems to have happened to the civilization of people?