ECON 2010 Lecture Notes - Lecture 17: Price Ceiling, Giffen Good, Marginal Utility
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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QUESTION 25
What will happen in a market where a binding price floor is removed?
a. |
There will be upward pressure on the prices. |
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b. |
The price or quantity of the product sold in the legal market will not change. |
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c. |
There will be downward pressure on the prices. |
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d. |
The products sold will become scarcer. |
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e. |
There will be increased pressure to buy and sell the good on the black market. |
1.05000 points
QUESTION 26
The local bakery calculates the price elasticity of demand for its cinnamon rolls to be â1.25. This tells them that demand is ________ and price is ________ to the buyer.
a. |
perfectly inelastic; everything |
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b. |
perfectly elastic; meaningless |
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c. |
elastic; more important than the quantity |
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d. |
inelastic; less important than the quantity |
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e. |
unitary elastic; on the same level as quantity |
1.05000 points
QUESTION 27
Marginal product is the change in:
a. |
total output minus the change in input. |
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b. |
total output divided by the change in input. |
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c. |
input divided by the change in total output. |
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d. |
total output plus the change in input. |
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e. |
total output times the change in input. |
1.05000 points
QUESTION 28
The government imposes a tax on each plastic bag sold such that the producer of the plastic bags must pay the tax to the government. In the market for plastic bags, the:
a. |
supply curve shifts to the left. |
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b. |
supply curve shifts to the right. |
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c. |
demand curve shifts to the right. |
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d. |
demand curve shifts to the left. |
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e. |
the supply curve and the demand curve shift to the left. |
1.05000 points
QUESTION 29
Pepsi and Coke are considered substitute goods. Because of this, one would predict that, holding all else constant, if the price of Pepsi increases, we would see:
a. |
the demand curve for Pepsi shift to the right. |
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b. |
the demand curve for Coke shift to the right. |
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c. |
no change in the demand for Coke. |
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d. |
the demand curve for Coke shift to the left. |
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e. |
the demand curve for Pepsi shift to the left. |
1.05000 points
QUESTION 30
The government has identified a situation where the production of a good is creating a negative externality. The government should enact legislation to require firms to internalize the externality:
a. |
as long as there are positive health benefits associated with this policy. |
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b. |
as long as it will not increase the price of the good being produced. |
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c. |
in all such cases. |
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d. |
if the benefits of doing so outweigh the costs. |
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e. |
as long as it will not create unemployment in this industry. |
1.05000 points
QUESTION 31
The out-of-pocket expenses incurred in producing a good are also known as:
a. |
wages and prices. |
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b. |
fiduciary costs. |
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c. |
explicit costs. |
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d. |
capital costs. |
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e. |
implicit costs. |
1. Suppose that there is a tax of $1 per unit, and the elasticity of supply is 3 and the elasticity of demand is 2 (in absolute value). How much of the $1 tax is paid by sellers?
$0.60 | ||
$0.40 | ||
$0.75 | ||
$0.67 |
2. In Market X, the external benefit of consumption is $5. In Market Y, the external cost of consumption is $10. Efficiency in both markets could be achieved by:
a tax of $5 in Market X and a subsidy of $10 in Market Y. | ||
subsidizing both markets. | ||
taxing Market Y and subsidizing Market X. | ||
taxing both markets. |
3.Economic theory suggests that a natural monopoly should be:
eliminated whenever it arises. | ||
regulated to take advantage of economies of scale. | ||
left alone to operate with excess capacity. | ||
taken over by the government. |
4.When the size of the production is the most efficient:
total cost is at the minimum. | ||
average cost is at the minimum. | ||
marginal cost is at the minimum. | ||
fixed cost is at the minimum. |
5.A firm should exit the industry if which of the following conditions apply?
TR > TC | ||
P < AC | ||
Lifetime expected profit is positive. | ||
Prices are low now but expected to rise. |
6.Figure: Costs
Reference: Ref 11-6
(Figure: Costs) Use the figure. At a price of $20, the firm earns profit of:
$75. | ||
$300. | ||
$225. | ||
$0, because P = MC at P = $20. |
7.When external benefits are present, the market price is ________, however when external costs are present, the market price is ________.
too low; too high | ||
equal to the efficient price; too low | ||
too high; too low | ||
equal to the efficient price; too high |
8.Which of the following statements is TRUE?
I. The EPA's tradeable allowances program for sulfur dioxide establishes property rights to pollute and helps reduce transaction costs by distributing allowances, maintaining databases, and monitoring emissions.
II. One criticism of tradeable allowances is that they prohibit non-businesses and environmental groups from purchasing the allowances.
III. The tradeable allowances for sulfur dioxide have performed poorly because electricity output has increased, causing a rise in sulfur dioxide levels.
I only | ||
II and III only | ||
I, II, and III | ||
III only |
9.Price floors make it illegal to compete for more customers by lowering prices, so firms compete by offering customers:
various options. | ||
more quantity. | ||
more discount. | ||
higher quality. |
10.Figure: Government Price Controls
Reference: Ref 8-3
(Figure: Government Price Controls) Refer to the figure. If the government sets the price ceiling at $31, there will be:
a shortage of 15 units. | ||
a surplus of 15 units. | ||
a supply of 20 units. | ||
no effect on the market. |
11.In which of these instances does price function as a signal in the market?
Suppliers invest more in exploration when the price of oil increases. | ||
Consumers complain of price gouging as the price of oil skyrockets. | ||
Government imposes price controls on the skyrocketing price of oil. | ||
All of the answers are correct. |
12.Ethanol and sugar are both made from sugar cane, and ethanol can be used as substitute fuel for oil. Increasing oil prices cause the demand for ethanol to increase. This will cause the ______ sugar to ______ and its price to ______.
demand for; decrease; decrease | ||
supply of; increase; increase | ||
supply of; decrease; increase | ||
demand for; increase; increase |
13.Why do cotton growers spend billions of dollars to dam rivers and transport water hundreds of miles to grow cotton in California deserts?
Cotton growers in California don't pay payroll taxes. | ||
The water used to grow California cotton is highly subsidized by the government. | ||
Cotton growers in California are mostly operated as nonprofit enterprises. | ||
The water used to grow California cotton is high in mineral contents, making for a bigger cotton yield. |
14.Suppose that the equilibrium price in the market is $10. If the current market price is $7.50:
the equilibrium price will fall to $7.50. | ||
competition among buyers will increase the current price. | ||
the current price will fall below $7.50 as sellers compete for market share. | ||
There is not enough information provided to answer the question. |
15.Which of the following would increase the demand for beef?
lower pork prices | ||
higher consumer income | ||
higher prices of feed grains used to feed beef cattle | ||
an increase in the price of beef |
16.A change in quantity supplied is reflected by a movement along the same supply curve while a change in supply refers to a shift in the entire supply curve.
True
False
17.Table: Production in the United States and Germany
Labor units required to produce: |
One Clock | One Sofa |
United States | 2 | 5 | |
Germany | 3 | 9 |
Reference: Ref 2-8
(Table: Production in the United States and Germany) According to the table, the opportunity cost of producing one sofa in the United States is _________, and the opportunity cost of producing one sofa in Germany is _______.
two clocks; three clocks | ||
10 clocks; 27 clocks | ||
0.4 clocks; 0.33 clocks | ||
2.5 clocks; three clocks |
18.Mark values his drum set at $800 and Ella values her guitar at $1,000. Suppose that Mark trades his drum set for Ella's guitar.
This trade makes Ella worse off by $200. | ||
This trade makes Mark better off by $200. | ||
Mark must value Ella's guitar for at least $1,000, and Ella must value Mark's drum set for at least $800. | ||
This trade creates value by moving the guitar and drum set to people who value them more. |