A) has been increasing over the last 30 years.
B) has been decreasing over the past 30 years.
C) is non-existent.
D) has been decreasing so much that while a raw wage gap still exists it is quite small.
E) will likely change from negative to positive over the next decade.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) held constant at about 0.7.
B) fell steadily from about 1.0 in 1980 to 0.5 in 2012.
C) increased modestly from 0.5 in 1980 to almost 0.6 in 2012.
D) increased substantially from 0.6 in 1980 to almost 0.8 in 2012.
E) increased substantially from 0.4 in 1980 to just under 0.7 in 2012.
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Multiple Choice
A) $0.00 to differences in work experience; $2.50 to discrimination/unobservable characteristics.
B) $1.20 to differences in work experience; $1.30 to discrimination/unobservable characteristics.
C) $1.30 to differences in work experience; $1.20 to discrimination/unobservable characteristics.
D) $1.50 to differences in work experience; $1.00 to discrimination/unobservable characteristics.
E) $2.50 to differences in work experience; $0.00 to discrimination/unobservable characteristics.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) All discriminating employers will hire only whites.
B) All firms will earn the same amount of profit regardless of their discriminatory preferences.
C) Any employer with a discrimination coefficient greater than 0.6 will hire only white workers.
D) Any employer with a discrimination coefficient greater than 1.6 will hire only black workers.
E) Any employer with a positive discrimination coefficient will hire only white workers.
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Multiple Choice
A) differences in education levels.
B) differences in the returns to skill.
C) gender discrimination.
D) differences in labor market experience.
E) differences in productivity.
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Multiple Choice
A) lower wages for the discriminated-against worker group.
B) a lower output price regardless of who the firm hires.
C) a segregated workforce.
D) lower firm profits.
E) all of these are results of customer discrimination.
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Multiple Choice
A) The difference in male and female wages in the United States is less than in almost any other developed country.
B) The difference in male and female wages in the United States is about the average of other developed countries.
C) Men and women are typically employed at the same rate in developed countries.
D) There is a sizeable wage gap between men and women in most developed countries.
E) There is no discernable wage gap between men and women in most developed countries.
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Multiple Choice
A) been relatively flat; steadily increased
B) been relatively flat; steadily decreased
C) steadily increased; steadily increased
D) steadily increased; steadily decreased
E) steadily increased; been relatively flat
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Multiple Choice
A) The new store will hire more male associates than the typical existing store.
B) The new store will make greater profit than it would if it would hold similarly biased views.
C) The new store will have lower per-employee labor costs than existing stores.
D) The new store will likely have lower prices than existing stores.
E) The new store will have to hire female associates to compete with its competition.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) leads to inefficiency.
B) never leads to higher utility.
C) empirically does not exist.
D) empirically is due primarily to employees and not employers or consumers.
E) empirically is due primarily to consumers and not employers or employees.
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Multiple Choice
A) a desire to maximize profit regardless of who one hires.
B) a preference to hire a certain type of worker, e.g., a worker of one's same race.
C) a preference to hire an integrated workforce.
D) a desire to advance social causes over maximizing profits.
E) hiring minority workers but then firing them quickly.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) There will be no effect because the firm is currently color-blind.
B) If the quota is already met, the firm will make no changes in its hiring practices.
C) If the firm currently meets the required quota, it will cut costs by adjusting labor to exactly meet the affirmative action requirements.
D) If the firm currently meets the quota, it will begin to lose profits due to the affirmative action requirements.
E) The firm will have to fire some workers.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the cost of hiring whites.
B) the wage of whites.
C) the wage of blacks.
D) the white-black wage gap.
E) total profit.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Most firms are discriminatory.
B) Workers don't care if firms are discriminatory.
C) Discrimination is not profitable.
D) Discrimination can only occur if there are exactly two types of labor (e.g., white and black) .
E) Discrimination can only occur in competitive labor markets.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Whites are more inclined than blacks to work part-time.
B) Blacks have less education than whites.
C) Labor market discrimination.
D) Whites are more likely than blacks to hold positions in upper management.
E) Whites are more likely than blacks to own their own business.
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Multiple Choice
A) employer discrimination.
B) employee discrimination.
C) consumer discrimination.
D) statistical discrimination.
E) racial discrimination.
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Multiple Choice
A) Differences in schooling.
B) Differences in skills.
C) Differences in experience.
D) Differences in language.
E) All of the above lead to differences in wages but none of them necessarily qualifies as discrimination.
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Multiple Choice
A) Because workers who have the worst wage options are those most likely to leave the labor force.
B) Because educated workers are those most likely to leave the labor force.
C) Because the most experienced workers are those most likely to leave the labor force.
D) Because wages don't take into account salaried workers.
E) Because the U.S. has a negatively skewed wage distribution.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) occupational crowding is substantial in the United States, but this should not be thought of as a source of discrimination.
B) occupational crowding is substantial in the United States, and much of this should be thought of as a source of discrimination.
C) occupational crowding is substantial in the United States, but occupational crowding is unrelated to discrimination.
D) there is minimal occupational crowding in the United States, and therefore it cannot be a source of discrimination.
E) there is minimal occupational crowding in the United States, but this is still thought to be an important cause of racial discrimination but not gender discrimination.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) held constant at about 0.7.
B) fell steadily from about 1.0 in 1980 to 0.5 in 2012.
C) increased modestly from 0.7 in 1980 to about 0.8 in 2012.
D) increased substantially from under 0.5 in 1980 to almost 1.0 in 2012.
E) increased substantially from 0.4 in 1980 to over 0.8 in 2012.
Correct Answer
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