ECON 1000 Chapter Notes - Chapter 5: Smoke Detector, Market Failure, Price Floor
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Considering the demand side of a market for a good, it is reasonable to expect that:
i. demand curves for a given good are identical between consumers
ii. demand curves for a given good differ between consumers
iii. an individual has identical demand curves for different goods
iv. an individual has different demand curves for different goods
i |
ii |
iii |
iv |
i and iii |
ii and iv |
Suppose the market demand curve for a good is represented by the linear equation Q = 60 - 0.75P. If the market price were to increase from P = $20 to P = $40, then holding all other factors constant:
the quantity demanded would decrease by 10 units and total expenditures on the good would decrease by $400 |
the quantity demanded would decrease by 15 units and total expenditures on the good would increase by $300 |
the quantity demanded would decrease by 30 units and total expenditures on the good would increase by $1200 |
the quantity demanded would increase by 20 units and total expenditures on the good would decrease by $800 |
the quantity demanded would increase by 10 units and total expenditures on the good would increase by $100 |
the quantity demanded would increase by 25 units and total expenditures on the good would increase by $1000 |
A perfectly competitive firms supply curve for a good identifies the:
i. minimum quantity supplied at each price, holding all other factors constant
ii. firms minimum willingness to accept for each incremental unit of the good (e.g., the first unit, second unit, etc.), holding all other factors constant
iii. maximum quantity supplied at each price, holding all other factors constant
iv. firms maximum willingness to accept for each incremental unit of the good (e.g., the first unit, second unit, etc.), holding all other factors constant
i and ii |
i and iv |
ii and iii |
iii and iv |
Considering the supply side of a market for a good, if a firms supply curve were vertical, then:
the law of supply holds, and quantity supplied is completely insensitive to changes in price |
the law of supply holds, and quantity supplied is highly sensitive to changes in price |
the law of supply fails to hold, and quantity supplied is completely insensitive to changes in price |
the law of supply fails to hold, and quantity supplied is highly sensitive to changes in price |
none of the above |
The determinants of supply are:
i. factors other than price that will affect the quantity of a good or service a firm is willing and able to purchase
ii. factors that affect a producers maximum willingness-to-accept to produce various quantities of a good
iii. factors that affect a producers minimum willingness-to-accept to produce various quantities of a good
i |
ii |
iii |
i and ii |
i and iii |
The market supply curve for a good is derived by:
i. horizontally summing the supply curves of the individual firms in the market
ii. vertically summing the supply curves of the individual firms in the market
iii. summing the quantity supplied by each firm at a given price and then repeating this over the range of prices
i |
ii |
iii |
i and ii |
i and iii |
If the level of technology used in the production of a good improves, and assuming the quality of the good does not change, then:
i. more output may be obtained with a given amount of inputs compared to before the technological improvement
ii. a given amount of output may be obtained with fewer inputs compared to before the technological improvement
iii. the firm will increase its use of other inputs, such as the number of workers it employs
iv. market demand for the good will increase
i |
ii |
iii |
iv |
i and ii |
i, ii, and iii |
i, ii, and iv |
i, ii, iii, and iv |
Considering the market for gasoline, which of the following would result in an increase in market supply?
i. a decrease in the price of gasoline
ii. an improvement in oil extraction and refining technologies
iii. an increase in the wage rates paid to gasoline refinery workers
iv. a decrease in the price of crude oil, a key input used to produce gasoline
v. the imposition of a federal gasoline tax aimed a decreasing the emission of greenhouse gases
i |
ii |
iii |
iv |
v |
ii and iv |
i, ii, and iv |
i, ii, iii, and iv |
i, ii, iii, iv and v |
Suppose a market has two identical sellers. If each sellers supply function is given by P = 20 + Q, then the market supply function is:
P = 20 + 0.5Q |
P = 20 + 2Q |
P = 40 + Q |
P = 40 + 2Q |
From the market framework discussed in class and the readings, it may be concluded that in order for a good to be exchanged between a seller and a buyer, it must be that:
buyer maximum willingness-to-pay is greater than seller minimum willingness-to-accept |
buyer maximum willingness-to-pay is greater than or equal to seller minimum willingness-to-accept |
buyer minimum willingness-to-pay is greater than or equal to seller maximum willingness-to-accept |
buyer minimum willingness-to-pay is greater than seller maximum willingness-to-accept |
If the market demand function is given by P = 80 - 0.3Q and the market supply is given by P = 20 + 0.1Q, then the equilibrium price and quantity are:
P = $35 and Q = 150 |
P = $65 and Q = 150 |
P = $26 and Q = 60 |
P = $28 and Q = 80 |
Of concern are the affects of sustained summer droughts on the domestic supply of wheat. Noting that wheat is a primary ingredient in the production of bread and that potatoes are a substitute for bread, if the supply of wheat declines then it is reasonable to expect:
the price of wheat to fall, the supply of bread to increase, and the demand for potatoes to increase |
the price of wheat to fall, the supply of bread to increase, and the demand for potatoes to decrease |
the price of wheat to rise, the supply of bread to decrease, and the demand for potatoes to decrease |
the price of wheat to rise, the supply of bread to decrease, and the demand for potatoes to increase |
the price of wheat to rise, the supply of bread to increase, and the demand for potatoes to increase |
the price of wheat to rise, the supply of bread to increase, and the demand for potatoes to decrease |
Suppose a perfectly competitive market is initially in equilibrium. If market demand and supply decrease simultaneously, then equilibrium:
price will rise, but the equilibrium quantity may either rise, fall, or remain unchanged |
quantity will rise, but the equilibrium price may either rise, fall, or remain unchanged |
price will fall, but the equilibrium quantity may either rise, fall, or remain unchanged |
quantity will fall, but the equilibrium price may either rise, fall, or remain unchanged |
Considering the demand side of a market for a good, the consumer surplus derived by an individual:
i. is the difference between the maximum amount the consumer is willing to pay on each unit and the minimum prices that producers are willing to accept
ii. is the difference between the minimum amount the consumer is willing to pay on each unit and the price he/she
actually pays
iii. is the difference between the maximum amount the consumer is willing to pay on each unit and the price he/she actually pays
iv. will decrease if price increases
i |
ii |
iii |
i and iv |
ii and iv |
iii and iv |
Suppose the market demand for a good is described by the equation P = 120 - 2Q. If a change in market supply results in price decreasing from P0 = $80 to P1 = $70, then the resulting change in consumer surplus is:
$225 |
$400 |
$575 |
$625 |
$750 |
1).
A consumer spends more time searching for a good when her reservation price is:
increased.
reduced.
fixed.
None of the statements is correct.
2).
In the game shown below, firms 1 and 2 must independently decide whether to charge high or low prices.
Which of the following are Nash equilibrium payoffs in the one-shot game?
(0, 0)
(5, -5)
(-5, 5)
(10, 10)
3).
A risk-neutral individual would:
prefer $5 with certainty to a risky prospect with the expected value of $5.
prefer a risky prospect with an expected value of $5 to a certain amount of $5.
be indifferent between a risky prospect with an expect value of $5 to a certain amount of $5.
prefer a risky prospect with the expected value of $0.50 to $5 with certainty.
4).
Snowpeak Ski Resort offers a price for a lift ticket that is barely over its marginal cost, but the high equipment rental fee keeps generating big profits. Which pricing strategy is the management using?
Price discrimination
Two-part pricing
Commodity bundling
Cross-subsidization
5).
The short run is defined as the time frame:
in which there are no fixed factors of production.
in which there are fixed factors of production.
less than one year.
less than three years.
6).
Fixed costs exist only in:
the long run.
capital-intensive markets.
the short run.
labor-intensive markets.
7).
Top of Form
Non-fed ground beef is an inferior good. In economic booms, grocery managers should:
increase their orders of non-fed ground beef.
reduce their orders of non-fed ground beef.
not change their orders of non-fed ground beef.
neither increase, reduce, nor maintain their current orders for non-fed ground beef.
Bottom of Form
8).
Which of the following pricing strategies is NOT used in markets with special cost and demand structures?
Peak-load pricing
Cross-subsidization
Transfer pricing
Low-price guarantees
9).
A perfectly competitive firm faces a:
perfectly elastic demand function.
perfectly inelastic demand function.
demand function with unitary elasticity.
None of the answers is correct.
10).
The special demand structure that induces a firm to use a cross-subsidization strategy is:
perfect substitution among products.
imperfect substitution among products.
independent demand for products.
interdependent demand for products.
11).
Which of the following factors reduces the need for government involvement in the marketplace?
The presence of externalities
The incentive to rent-seek
The need for public goods
Incomplete information
12).
Which of the following statements is true?
A mineral rights auction is not the same as a common-value auction.
An auctioneer is always indifferent between different kinds of auctions.
The Dutch and first-price, sealed-bid auctions are strategically equivalent.
An English auction always yields lower expected revenues than a second-price, sealed-bid auction.
13).
Which of the following is true concerning negative externalities?
Firms tend to produce more than the efficient level of output.
Society gains because firms do not pay the external costs of production.
Perfect competition is better than monopoly from the viewpoint of society even in the presence of negative externalities.
With negative externalities, a monopoly will always produce an output level less than is socially efficient.
14).
Which of the following is true under monopoly?
P > ATC
P > MC
P = MR
P = ATC
15).
Differentiated goods are NOT a feature of a:
perfectly competitive market.
monopolistically competitive market.
monopolistic market.
perfectly competitive market and monopolistic market.
16).
Producer surplus is measured as the area
below the demand curve and above the market price.
above the demand curve and below the market price.
above the supply curve and below the market price.
below the supply curve and above the market price.
17).
Jaynet spends $25,000 per year on painting supplies and storage space. She recently received two job offers from a famous marketing firm â one offer was for $105,000 per year, and the other was for $85,000. However, she turned both jobs down to continue a painting career. If Jaynet sells 30 paintings per year at a price of $9,000 each:
a. What are her accounting profits?
$
b. What are her economic profits?
$
18).
You are the manager of a monopoly that sells a product to two groups of consumers in different parts of the country. Group 1âs elasticity of demand is -2, while group 2âs is -4. Your marginal cost of producing the product is $40.
a. Determine your optimal markups and prices under third-degree price discrimination.
Instruction: Round your answers to two decimal places.
Markup for group 1:
Price for group 1: $
Markup for group 2:
Price for group 2: $
b. Which of the following are necessary conditions for third-degree price discrimination to enhance profits.
Instructions: You may select more than one answer. Click the box with a check mark for the correct answers and click twice to empty the box for the wrong answers. You must click to select or deselect each option in order to receive full credit.
At least one group has elasticity of demand less than one in absolute value. | |
There are two different groups with different (and identifiable) elasticities of demand. | |
We are able to prevent resale between the groups. | |
At least one group has elasticity of demand greater than 1 in absolute value. |
19).
You are the manager of a firm that receives revenues of $60,000 per year from product X and $80,000 per year from product Y. The own price elasticity of demand for product X is -1.5, and the cross-price elasticity of demand between productY and X is -1.4.
How much will your firm's total revenues (revenues from both products) change if you increase the price of good X by 2 percent?
Instructions: Round your answer to the nearest dollar. Include a minus (-) sign if applicable.
$