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SUGGESTED SOLUTIONS: INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS – NOVEMBER 2014 PAPER SECTION A 1. A 2. A 3. B 4. D 5. C 6. D 7. B 8. C 9. A 10. A 11. C 12. D 13. D 14. C 15. C 16. A 17. A 18. D 19. A 20. C SECTION B 21. (a) The Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns states that as we add more units of a variable input (e.g labour) to fixed amounts of capital and land the change in output will first rise then fall. Diminishing returns to labour occurs when marginal product starts to fall, implying that total output will increase at a decreasing rate when more workers are employed. The student must allude to the fact that marginal product first rise then fall because the behaviour of marginal product is linked directly to the productivity of each additional worker. At low levels of employment the fixed factors of production land and capital are said to be under-utilized. This means that each additional worker will have enough capital to use and as a result, marginal product will rise. However, beyond a certain point the factors of production becomes scarcer and new workers will lack capital to work with causing conflict among workers scrambling for the now fewer capital and land. As a result, the productivity of each additional worker falls and as the labour input increases the capital per worker ratio declines causing diminishing marginal returns. (12 marks). 22. (b) Four factors: i. how much satisfaction they get from buying and consuming an extra unit of a good or service. (2 marks) ii. The price of alternatives/ substitute good and services available. (2 marks) iii. The price that they have to pay to make this purchase (2 marks) iv. The satisfaction/utility derived from consuming alternative products. (2 marks) (a) (i) (ii) Number of Close Substitutes within the Market The availability of substitutes is the most important determinant of price elasticity of demand because how consumers react to a change in the price of a product depends on what alternatives they have. For example when the price of fuel rises, consumers have fewer alternatives so quantity demanded falls only a little. But if PEOPLES raises the price of its bread, consumers have consumers have many alternatives and so quantity demanded is likely to fall quite a lot. In general, if a product has more substitutes available, it will have more elastic demand and similarly if a product has fewer substitutes available it will have less elastic demand. (3 marks) Luxuries iii. (b) Goods that are luxuries will usually have more elastic demand curves than goods that are necessities. For example the demand for maize is inelastic because maize is a necessity and the quantity that people buy is not very much dependent on its price. Tickets for a concert are a luxury, so the demand for concert tickets is much more elastic than the demand for maize. (3 marks) Percentage of Income Spent on a Good Goods that take only a small fraction of a consumer’s budget tend to have less elastic demand. For example most people buy salt infrequently and in relatively small quantities and further the share of average consumers budget spent on the same is very low in that the doubling of the price of salt is likely to result in only a small decline in the quantity of salt demanded. Big ticket items such as cars and furniture take up a larger share in the average consumer’s budget and so increases in the prices of these goods are likely to result in significant declines in the quantity demanded. In general the demand for a good is less elastic the smaller the share of the good in the average consumer’s budget. (3 marks) iv. Passage Demand tends to be more elastic in the long run rather than in the short run. For example if the price of fuel increases, it would take a while for consumers to decide to shift towards buying more fuel efficient cars reducing the quantity of fuel they purchase. The more time passes, the more elastic the demand for a product becomes. (3 marks) v. Habit Formation of Goods Goods such as cigarettes and drugs tend to be inelastic in demand. Preferences are such that habitual consumers of certain products become de-sensitised to price changes. (3 marks) Price elasticity of supply refers to the responsiveness of the quantity supplied to a change in price measured by dividing the percentage change in the quantity supplied of a product by the percentage change in the products price. Its value is positive because an increase in price is likely to increase the quantity supplied to the market and vice-versa. (2 marks) 23. (a) 24. Exchange is the price of domestic currency per unit of foreign currency. It is basically a price for selling or buying foreign currency and measures the relative strength of the domestic currency per unit of foreign currency (3 marks) (b) (i) Certainty for exporters and importers; (ii) Strong discipline on firms to keep costs under control; (iii) Less speculations among traders (9 marks) (c) (i) Depreciation makes exports cheaper, hence boosts export revenue (ii) Depreciation makes imports expensive, hence curtails demand for imported goods (8 marks) (a) LRR – the amount of cash reserves banks are required to keep at the central bank for monetary purposes. Increase in LRR, is a contractionary monetary policy; lowering LRR is expansionary (5 marks) (b) Inflation Targeting – specifying/prescribing a given inflation rate and manipulating other policy variables to achieve the pre-determined target rate (5 marks) (c) Budget deficit – shortfall between government total revenue and expenditures (5 marks) (d) External debt refers to the debt of a sovereign to foreign creditors (5 marks). 25. (a) Banks perform the following functions: (i) Facilitate payments (3 marks) (ii) Provide credit hence performing intermediation role (3 marks) (iii) Provide safe custody of public funds (3 months) (b) Money market – market where short term instruments are traded; Capital market where long terms instruments are traded (9 marks) (c) By encouraging securitization of products; or providing capital gains incentives or providing incentives for issuance of long term bonds (Any one suggestion) (2 marks)