Economics 1021A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Broccoli, Real Income, Relative Price
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1) Suppose your grandmother gave you $25 for your birthday and you decided to spend all of it on candy bars and bags of popcorn. The price of candy bars is $1.25 and price of a bag of peanuts is $3.75.
a) Construct a table showing the alternative combinations of the two products that are available.
b) Plot the data in your table as a budget line in a graph. What is the slope of the budget line? What is the opportunity cost of one more candy bar? Of one bag of peanuts?
c) How, in general, would you decide which of the available combinations of candy bars and bags of peanuts to buy?
2) With current technology, suppose a firm is producing 750 screwdrivers daily. Also assume that the least-cost combination of resources in producing those screwdrivers is 15 units of labor, 20 units of land, 4 units of capital, and 3 unit of entrepreneurial ability, selling at prices of $50, $45, $75, and $50, respectively. If the firm can sell these 750 screwdrivers at $2.50 per unit,
a) what is its total revenue?
b) what is its total cost?
c) what is its profit or loss?
d) will it continue to produce screwdrivers?
e) If this firm’s situation is typical for the other makers of screwdrivers, will resources flow toward or away from this product?
3) How will each of the following changes in demand and/or supply affect equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity in a competitive market; that is, do equilibirium price and quantity rise, fall , or are the answers indeterminate because they depend on the magnitudes of the shifts?
a)Supply decreases and demand is constant. Change in eqilibrium price chnage in eqilibrium quantity
b)Demand decreases and supply is constant.
c)Supply increases and demand is constant.
d)Demand increases and supply increases.
e)Demand decreases and supply decreases.
4)Zeke likes to go to music concerts. The number of times per year that he attends concerts depends on both the price of the concerts as well as Zeke’s income and the cost of other types of entertainment—in particular, how much it costs to go see a movie instead of attending concerts. The three demand schedules in the $60,000 per year and movies cost $10 each. In scenario D2, Zeke's income is also $60,000 per year, but the price of seeing a movie rises to $12. And in scenario D3, Zeke's income goes up to $80,000 per year, while movies cost $12.
a)Using the data under D1 and D2, calculate the cross-elasticity of Zeke's demand for concerts at all three prices. (To do this, apply the midpoints approach to the cross-elasticity of demand.) Is the cross-elasticity the same at all three prices? Are movies and concerts substitute goods, complementary goods, or independent goods?
b)Using the data under D2 and D3, calculate the income elasticity of Zeke's demand for concerts at all three prices. (To do this, apply the midpoints approach to the income elasticity of demand.) Is the income elasticity the same at all three prices? Are concerts an inferior good?
PRICE | D1 | D2 | D3 |
50 | 10 | 5 | 12 |
40 | 15 | 10 | 25 |
30 | 25 | 15 | 40 |
Income 60,000 60,000 80,000
Cost of revenue 10 12 12
5) On the basis of the three individual demand schedules below, and assuming these three people are the only ones in the society, determine (a) the market (a) the market demand schedule on the assumption that the good is a private good and (b) the collective demand schedule on the assumption that the good is a public good.
P | Qd(D1) | Qd(D2) | Qd(d3) |
20 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
19 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
17 | 0 | 2 | 3 |
16 | 0 | 3 | 4 |
15 | 1 | 4 | 5 |
14 | 2 | 5 | 6 |
13 | 3 | 6 | 7 |
12 | 4 | 7 | 8 |
11 | 5 | 8 | 9 |
10 | 6 | 9 | 10 |
10. | The long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS) is Y = Yf, which depends on the amounts of resources and the level of technology innovation. If a country has more resources and better technology, which of the following is true? | ||||||||||||||||
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11. | Suppose the wage rates of workers are based on the expected price level. If there is an unexpected increase in AD, it will cause the actual price level to increase. Then workers should raise their expected price level and negotiate a higher wage rate. Then which of the following is most likely to be true when the expected price increases? | ||||||||||||||||
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12. | Suppose the economy is in the long-run equilibrium, i.e., Y = Yf, and there is an unexpected decrease in AD. Assume that Yf is fixed, then which of the following is most likely to be true? | ||||||||||||||||
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13. | The short-run (SR) equilibrium is the intersection between AD and SRAS, and long-run (LR) equilibrium is the intersection between AD and LRAS. Every LR equilibrium is a SR equilibrium, but a SR equilibrium is not always the LR equilibrium. If an economy is operating at a SR equilibrium where Y > Yf, which of the following will occur in the process toward the new LR equilibrium when the economy corrects itself? | ||||||||||||||||
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14. | From the Keynesians, Y = C + I + G + NX can be transformed into a theoretical model. In particular, assume that the consumption C = A + mpc (Y-T), where A is a constant, mpc is the marginal propensity to consume, Y is national income and T is income taxes. Suppose in the goods market equilibrium, aggregate expenditure = national income such that the two Y's will be the same from Y = A + mpc (Y-T) + I + G+ NX. . Suppose C = 400 + 0.75(Y – T). G = 100, I = 100, T = 100, and NX = 150, what is the Y in the goods market equilibrium? (All of the variables are in terms of million dollars) | ||
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15. | Continue to assume that C = 400 + 0.75 (Y - 100), I = 100, and NX = 150. But the government now increases spending from 100 to 200, how much is the new Y in the goods market equilibrium? | ||||||||||||||||
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16. | Continue to assume that C = 400 + 0.75 (Y - 100). Then which of the following is true? | ||||||||||||||||
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17. | Suppose the federal government needs to balance the budget, which means that when the government spending increases, taxes must increase equally. In this case, government spending multiplier is called the balanced-budget multiplier, defined as the increase in real GDP/increase in government spending. By following the example from the previous question, how mcuh is the balanced-budget multiplier? | ||||||||||||||||
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