ECONOM 1014 Chapter Notes - Chapter 8: Key Money, Price Ceiling, Price Floor
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Who bears the primary costs of a rent control program?
A. | landlords | |||||||||||||
B. | renters that get rent-controlled apartments | |||||||||||||
C. | taxpayers | |||||||||||||
D. | the wealthy Assume the demand for sushi is Qd = 180 - 3P, where Qd is quantity demanded and P = price in dollars. The supply of sushi is Qs = 80 + 5P, where Qs is quantity supplied (and P is, again, price in dollars). A price of $20 would result in:
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US agricultural price supports are politically popular because
A. | They have no adverse impacts | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
B. | The US would have food shortages without them | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
C. | The benefits accrue to a large number of voters and the costs are paid by a small number of voters | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
D. | The costs are spread out among millions of people Assume the demand for sushi is Qd = 180 - 3P, where Qd is quantity demanded and P = price in dollars. The supply of sushi is Qs = 80 + 5P, where Qs is quantity supplied (and P is, again, price in dollars). What would be the equilibrium price?
Price floors and ceiling prices:
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Question 1
During a crisis such as Hurricane Katrina, governments often make it illegal to raise the price of emergency items like flashlights and bottled water. In practice, this means that these items get sold on a first-come, first-served basis. If a person has a flashlight that she values at $5, but its price on the black market is $40, what gains from trade are lost if the government shuts down the black market?
$30 | ||
$35 | ||
$40 | ||
Indeterminant with the given information. |
2 points
Question 2
Which of the following is an example of a price floor?
A sale price with a limit on the quantity you can purchase. | ||
Rent-controlled apartments | ||
Predatory pricing designed to put a competitor out of business. | ||
The minimum wage |
2 points
Question 3
Airline regulation of the 1970s produced a similar result to which of the following government interventions?
The Affordable Care Act | ||
Minimum wage laws | ||
Rent control laws | ||
Communism |
2 points
Question 4
Which of the following is a possible effect of a price ceiling?
A surplus of the good. | ||
Increases in product quality. | ||
Increased gains from trade. | ||
People will waste time in lines waiting to purchase the good. |
2 points
Question 5
What is a price ceiling?
A minimum price consumers are willing to pay. | ||
A minimum price allowed by law. | ||
A maximum price allowed by law. | ||
A maximum price consumers are willing to pay. |
2 points
Question 6
Why are the long lines generated by a shortage worse than paying a higher price in money?
It is not better or worse. Paying in time and paying in money are essentially the same in a market economy. | ||
Paying with time reduces the value of money, and prevents valuable trades from occurring. | ||
Waiting in line is a waste of a valuable resource: time. Paying a price in money transfers the value of resources from one person to another, and maximizes the value of resources. | ||
Paying with time gives those who do not work an advantage over those who do. |
2 points
Question 7
Which of the following is a possible effect of a price floor?
The quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded. | ||
Increased gains from trade. | ||
Decreases in product quality. | ||
A shortage of the good. |