* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Lecture 19 Review Questions
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Topics Covered after Midterm Chapter 9 – Comparative advantage and international trade, gains from trade, trade restrictions: quotas and tariffs, deadweight loss Chapter 10 – Concept of utility and diminishing marginal benefits, marginal utility per dollar spent, deriving demand curves, social influences on decision making (not 10.4 – behavioral economics) Chapter 11 – Production functions, relationship between average and marginal, marginal and average products of labor, diminishing marginal product, marginal cost and average cost, short run costs (fixed and variable), long run costs Topics Covered Chapter 12 – Meaning of perfect competition, profit maximization, P=MR & P=MC, market determination of price, graphs of costs, MR and profit, long run profits and entry and exit, PC markets and efficiency Chapter 15 - MR=MC<P, Deadweight loss of monopoly, barriers to entry. Chapter 13 – Monopolistically competitive markets, downward sloping demand and marginal revenue, MR<P, setting MR=MC<P, profits, long run effects, efficiency losses. 1 The U.S. domestic market for quality leather purses are given by: Qd=200-P Qs=50+2P Find the equilibrium quantity sold under autarky. Q=150 2. The world price for leather purses is $30. If the U.S. opens its market to international trade, calculate the producer surplus lost by U.S. producers. (Can use positive answer since it is a "loss".) Qd=200-P Qs=50+2P Loss of PS = $2600 3. To protect U.S. firms, the government imposes a $10 per purse tariff. Find the consumer surplus lost from this tariff. (Answer should be positive.) Qd=200-P Qs=50+2P Loss of CS = 1650 4. The price of soup is $2 per cup and the price of a sandwich is $3. Keira has $18 to spend on these two goods. If Keira maximizes her utility, how many sandwiches should she buy? 4 sandwiches (and 3 cups of soup) Quantity of Quantity of Total Utility Total Utility Soup (cups) Sandwiches 1 40 1 45 2 60 2 75 3 72 3 102 4 82 4 120 5 88 5 135 6 90 6 145 5. The price of soup is $2 per cup and the price of a sandwich is $3. Keira has $23 to spend on these two goods. If Keira maximizes her utility, how many sandwiches should she buy? 5 sandwiches (and 4 cups of soup) Quantity of Quantity of Total Utility Total Utility Soup (cups) Sandwiches 1 40 1 45 2 60 2 75 3 72 3 102 4 82 4 120 5 88 5 135 6 90 6 145 6. Given your answer to the previous question, what type of good are sandwiches (to Keira)? A. Inferior Good B. Giffen Good C. Normal Good D. Substitute Good Given your answer to the previous question, what type of good are sandwiches (to Keira)? Normal Good 7. The marginal utility per dollar that Harold Stratton receives from oranges is greater than the marginal utility per dollar Harold receives from pears. To maximize his utility, what should Harold do? a. He should acquire more income so that he can afford to buy more oranges and pears. b. He should reduce his consumption of both oranges and pears so that he can buy a greater variety of goods. c. He should buy fewer pears and more oranges. d. He should buy fewer oranges and more pears. The marginal utility per dollar that Harold Stratton receives from oranges is greater than the marginal utility per dollar Harold receives from pears. To maximize his utility, what should Harold do? He should buy fewer pears and more oranges. 8. Does the firm choose to operate in the short run? Yes! P>min AVC 9. What is the firm’s shut down price in the short run? P0 = min AVC 10. Would firms enter or exit in the long run? Exit 11. What will the long run equilibrium price be? P2 = min ATC 12. The figure shows short-run cost and demand curves for a monopolistically competitive firm in the market for designer watches. What price is charged by the profit maximizing firm? P3 13. If the diagram represents a typical firm in the designer watch market, what is likely to happen in the long run? A. Some firms will exit the market causing the demand to increase for firms remaining in the market. B. The firms that are making losses will be purchased by their more successful rivals. C. Inefficient firms will exit the market and new cost efficient firms will enter the market. D. Firms will have to raise their prices to cover costs of production. 14. What the (profit maximizing) firm's output if it is operating in a monopolistically comptetitive market with demand and costs given in the table below? Quantity Price Total Revenue Marginal Revenue Total Cost Marginal Cost 1 $30 $30 $30 $32 $32 2 28 56 26 43 11 3 26 78 22 53 10 4 24 96 18 64 11 5 22 110 14 76 12 6 20 120 10 90 14 7 18 126 6 106 16 8 16 128 2 126 20 Q=5, P=$22 & profit = $34