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Economics 1 Unit 2 Test Class Time: Name: Part A. Answer the following 7 questions in the space provided. Each question is worth 4 points. 1. Draw a diagram illustrating the case of a perfectly competitive business firm making a loss. Label the demand curve D, the marginal revenue curve MR, the marginal cost curve MC, and the average total cost curve ATC. Show the quantity the firm will choose to produce and the price it will charge and mark those Q1 and P1 respectively. 2. Draw a diagram for the short-run showing the typical marginal product of labor and label it MPL and the average product of labor curve and label it APL. Mark the specialization of labor region and the diminishing marginal returns region on your diagram. Mark the horizontal axis as N for number of workers and the vertical axis as output. 3. Draw a supply and demand diagram showing the effect of an increase in demand in the longrun for a decreasimg cost industry. Label the starting price and quantity P1 and Q1 and the ending price and quantity P2 and Q2. Be sure to label the axis of the diagram and any lines you draw on the diagram also. 4. A. List the 3 attributes or properties of perfect competition. (1) (2) (3) B. Circle the answer that goes in the blank. A firm that raises its price and takes in the exact same amount of total revenue as before has a demand elasticity of _____. 0 0.1 0.5 1 2 10 infinity 5. A sporting goods store has noticed that when they raise the price tennis rackets from $45 to $55, the number of tennis balls they sell falls from 120 to 80. Answer the following 2 questions. a. What is the cross-price elasticity of tennis balls with respect to the price of tennis rackets? This question is worth 2 points. b. What does the number you found for answer a mean? This question is worth 2 points. 6. A. What 2 problems does a market economy use price to solve so that the invisible hand will work? Hint – both problems begin with the letter “i” . 1. _________________________ 2. _________________________ B. List a good with an externality. State both the good and what the externality is. 7. A. List 2 of the 3 factors that will cause elasticity to be lower. (1) (2) B. Fill in the missing numbers in the following table. Q FC VC TC MC 0 $50 ____ $50 N/A 1 $50 ____ $90 ____ 2 ____ ____ ____ $30 Part B. Mark the letter of the correct answer on your scantron. Each question is worth 1 point. 1. A firm in perfect competition makes money when its price is higher than: a. its average total cost. b. its average variable cost. c. its demand curve. d. its fixed cost. 2. A firm in perfect competition is losing money in the short-run. It should: a. raise its price. b. lower its price. c. shut down production so it loses no money. d. none of the above. 3. Which of the following is most likely a variable cost for a business? a. The lease agreement for the factory. b. The interest payment on a loan. c. Labor. d. Both a and b. 4. When a firm has economies of scale, their average cost of production as they make more of the good is: a. rising. b. falling. c. staying the same. d. could be any of the above. 5. A reason that average total cost might be rising in the long-run is: a. specialization of labor. b. the law of increasing opportunity cost. c. mass production assembly line techniques. d. none of the above. 6. How much more you make doing one thing rather than the next best thing is called: a. accounting profit. b. economic profit. c. total revenue. d. total cost. 7. A reason that marginal cost might be rising in the short-run is: a. specialization of labor. b. command and control problems. c. diminishing marginal returns. d. both b and c. 8. When a factory goes from having 1 worker to 2 workers, its total production rises from 20 to 70. What is the marginal product of labor of worker 2? a. 20. b. 50. c. 70. d. 90. 9. If a firm in the short-run is losing money and does not expect business to improve in the future, it should shut down: a. immediately in all cases. b. only if P < AVC (TR < TVC). c. only if P < ATC (TR < TC). d. only when it gets to the long-run, and never shut down in the short-run. 10. A firm has a price of $5, an ATC of $6, and an AVC of $4. a. This firm is making money and should keep operating. b. This firm is losing money but should keep operating. c. This firm is losing money and should shut-down. 11. A firm can have a mismatch between the factory size and the amount of product it is producing: a. only in the short-run. b. only in the long-run. c. in both the short-run and the long-run. d. in neither the short-run nor the long-run. 12. For a firm in perfect competition, the owner has real control which of the following? a. Both the price he charges and the quantity of product he makes. b. The price he charges, but not the quantity. c. The quantity he makes, but not the price. d. Neither the price he charges or the quantity of product he makes. 13. In which case below will the long-run supply curve be a straight horizontal line? a. An increasing cost industry. b. A decreasing cost industry. c. A constant cost industry. d. There is no case in which this happens. 14. What is the rule about how much of its product a firm in perfect competition should produce? a. Where marginal revenue is as high above marginal cost as possible. b. Where marginal revenue is equal to marginal cost. c. Where the average total cost is equal to the demand curve. d. Where marginal cost is as high above marginal revenue as possible. 15. What is the cost of producing zero units in the short-run? a. Zero. b. Whatever the variable cost of producing zero is. c. Whatever the fixed cost is. d. Whatever the total revenue is. 16. The law of increasing opportunity cost is a reason that cost may rise: a. in both the short-run and the long-run. b. only in the short-run. c. only in the long-run. d. In neither the short-run or the long-run. 17. In the long-run for firms in perfect competition: a. profits never go to zero. b. profits rarely go to zero. c. profits often go to zero. d. profits always go to zero. 18. Which of the following is a good example of perfect competition? a. Wheat farming when there are many wheat farmers. b. Restaurants, when there are many restaurants. c. One electric company which powers a whole town. d. The breakfast cereal industry. 19. How does a price of $5.98 for a bushel come to be? a. The government set it. b. The Wall Street Journal set it, in consultation with the Chicago Board of Trade. c. It is at that price that all individual farmers will grow an individual amount of wheat which will add up to the total amount of wheat customers want to buy at that price. d. The farmers thought that was a fair price to set, as it covered all their costs of production plus left them with a small profit left over. 20. Cross-price elasticity between two cards is 0.2 These goods are: a. substitutes. b. complements. c. normal. d. inferior. 21. Which of the following is a public good? a. McDonald’s hamburgers. b. Bakersfield College. c. A city street. d. All of the above. 22. If the price is raised on a good with elasticity of 0.7, then total revenue will: a. rise. b. fall. c. stay the same. d. it might be any of the above, there is not enough information to tell. 23. Pepsi has an elasticity of 2.0 This means: a. if it raises its price $1, it sells 2 less cans. b. if it raises its price $2, it wells 1 less can. c. if it raises its price 1%, it sells 2% less cans. d. if it raises its price 2%, it sells 1% less cans. 24. The tragedy of the commons is that a fishing area that is open to use to everybody with no restrictions will often: a. not be used at all. b. be fished to extinction. c. be kept secret to all but a few. d. be the source of fierce fights between the users. 25. A public good is: a. easily excludable. b. not easily excludable. c. one produced by the government. d. both a and c. 26. What is the main way that customers know when the business has more of the good to sell than usual? a. The price goes down. b. They receive a newsletter from the business. c. The government tells them. d. Word of mouth from fellow customers. 27. Which of the following is an example of a good with an externality? a. Alcohol if someone drinks so much they get a hangover. b. A pizza place selling pizza next to a college since students love pizza. c. A store that sells computers so that they can make money. d. Someone driving a car which is polluting the air that others must breathe. 28. The tragedy of the commons is: a. that a resource that nobody owns will be used to extinction. b. a rich man buying up land and not letting anyone else use it. c. people can die in a commons and no one will care. d. the market produces only what the common man wants, and not anything else. 29. According to the average-marginal rule, if the current average cost of making radios is $40 and you make one more radio which cost $30 to make; then the new average cost per radio including this additional radio will be: a. higher than $40. b. lower than $40. c. stay at $40. d. there is not enough information to say. 30. A person who attempts to get a public good without paying is called: a. a thief. b. a customer. c. marginal guy. d. a free rider. 31. If there is a decrease in demand that causes the price of wheat to fall significantly and wheat farms in the U.S. have the market structure of perfect competition, then wheat farms in the U.S. will: a. have losses in the short-run, but not the long-run. b. have losses in the long-run, but not the short-run. c. have losses in both the short-run and long-run. d. not have losses in either the short-run nor long-run. 32. Which of the following is true for mass production assembly line production techniques? a. They make cost rise, but only in the short-run. b. They make cost rise, but only in the long-run. c. They make cost fall, but only in the short-run. d. They make cost fall, but only in the long-run. e. They make cost fall in both the short-run and long-run.