* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Microeconomics - Testbank 1 (Hubbard/O`Brien)
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Microeconomics - Testbank 1 (Hubbard/O'Brien) Chapter 10 Technology, Production, and Costs c1) The average total cost of production is the: A extra cost required to produce one more unit. ) B total cost of production. ) C total cost of production divided by the level of ) output. D total cost of production multiplied times the level of ) output. d2) Among the potential sources of an advance in technology for a producing firm is: A better trained workers. ) B more efficient physical capital. ) C higher skill level of managers. ) D all of the above. ) d3) The short run is: A one day. ) B one week. ) C six months. ) D as long it takes a particular firm to change its plant ) capacity. c4) A factor of production that is not fixed in the short run is: A physical capital. ) B technology. ) C labor. ) D land. ) d5) A characteristic of the long run is: A there are no fixed inputs. ) B all inputs can be varied. ) C plant capacity can be increased or decreased. ) D all of the above. ) b6) Economics cost of production differ from those in accounting in that: A economics includes expenditures for hired resources ) while accounting does not. B economics adds the opportunity cost of a firm using ) its own resources. C ) accounti includes expenditures for hired resources while ng economics does not. D accounting costs are always larger than economic ) costs. d7) Which of the following is an implicit cost of production? A Interest paid on a loan to a bank. ) B Wages paid to labor plus the cost of carrying benefits ) for workers. C The utility bill paid to water, electricity, and natural ) gas companies. D Rent that could have been earned on a building ) owned and used by the firm. d8) Implicit costs of production are also called: A overhead. ) B variable costs. ) C direct costs. ) D opportunity costs. ) c9) A factor of production that generally is fixed in the short run is: A raw materials. ) B labor. ) C a building. ) D water. ) c10 The relationship between different amounts of inputs ) and the resulting level of output is a: A total cost schedule. ) B production possibilities frontier. ) C production function. ) D production quota. ) d1 If the firm is producing nothing in the short run, then: 1) A total costs are zero. ) B variable costs are low but positive. ) C marginal costs are negative. ) D fixed costs are positive. ) c12 As a firm hires more labor in the short run, the: ) A level of total product stays constant. ) B output per worker rises. ) C extra output of another worker may rise at first, but ) eventually must fall. D costs of production are increasing at a fixed rate per ) unit of output. Refer to Figure 10.1 for the questions below. Figure 10.1 a13 In figure 10.1, diminishing returns to labor set in after: ) A L1. ) B L2. ) C L3. ) D none of the above. ) c14 In figure 10.1, short run output is maximized at: ) A L1. ) B L2. ) C L3. ) D none of the above. ) a15 In figure 10.1, AP of labor declines after L2 because: ) A MP of labor is below AP of labor. ) B MP of labor is falling. ) C MP of labor is negative. ) D MP of labor is positive. ) c16 If four workers can produce 18 chairs a day and five can ) produce 20 chairs a day, the marginal product of the fifth worker is: A four chairs. ) B five chairs. ) C two chairs. ) D 38 chairs. ) d1 The short run marginal product of labor increasing at 7) first and then falling is an example of the law of: A demand. ) B supply. ) C diminishing marginal utility. ) D diminishing returns. ) b1 The reason the marginal product of labor in the short 8) run increases at first and then falls is because: A as more labor is hired, they are not as skilled as the ) first ones hired. B there are fewer opportunities for division of labor ) and specialization. C the management is inefficient. ) D the extra workers have busy work piled on them. ) d1 If 11 workers can produce a total of 54 units of a product 9) and another worker has a marginal product of six, then the average product of 12 workers is: A 60. ) B ) 54. C 48. ) D 5. ) b2 If another worker adds nine units of output to a group 0) of workers who had an average product of seven units, then the average product of labor: A will remain the same. ) B will increase. ) C will decrease. ) D and what will happen to it can not be determined. ) c21 If average product is decreasing, we know that: ) A total product is negative. ) B marginal product is negative. ) C marginal product is smaller than average product. ) D marginal product is at its positive. ) d2 If all we know is all workers' marginal product, then 2) total and average product can be found by: A ) dividing marginal costs by the number of workers. B multiplying the average marginal product times the ) number of workers. C summing the marginal values to find the total and ) multiplying it times the number of workers to get the average. D summing the marginal values to find the total and ) dividing it by the number of workers to get the average. a23 If we know that marginal product is equal to average ) product, then: A average product is at a maximum. ) B total product is at a maximum. ) C marginal product is at a maximum. ) D average product must be falling. ) c24 Marginal cost is U-shaped because of the: ) A law of demand. ) B law of diminishing marginal utility. ) C law of diminishing returns. ) D law of increasing costs. ) b2 Average total cost is equal to: 5) A average fixed costs minus average variable costs. ) B total costs divided by the level of output. ) C marginal costs plus variable costs. ) D total costs divided by the number of workers. ) Refer to Figure 10.2 for the questions below. Figure 10.2 a26 In figure 10.2, the difference between average total costs ) and average variable costs is: A average fixed costs. ) B marginal costs. ) C fixed costs. ) D sunk costs. ) b2 In figure 10.2, average variable costs approach average 7) total costs as output rises because: A marginal costs are above average variable costs. ) B average fixed costs are falling. ) C fixed costs are falling. ) D total costs are falling. ) d2 In the long run: 8) A all inputs in production are variable. ) B there are no fixed costs. ) C total costs equal variable costs. ) D all of these are correct. ) c29 Long run costs are U-shaped because: ) A of the law of demand. ) B of the law of diminishing returns. ) C of economies and diseconomies of scale. ) D of the law of supply. ) b3 If average total cost is $50 and average fixed cost is $15 0) when output is 20 units, then the firm's total variable cost at that level of output is: A $1,000. ) B $700. ) C $300. ) D impossible to determine without additional ) information. b3 If average total cost is $50 and average fixed cost is $15 1) when output is 20 units, then the firm's average variable cost at that level of output is: A $45. ) B $35. ) C $30. ) D impossible to determine without additional ) information. d3 When the average total cost is $16, the level of total cost 2) is $800, then the number of units the firm is producing is: A impossible to determined with the information ) given. B 784. ) C 12,800. ) D 50. ) c33 If a firm doubles all its inputs in the long run and it ) finds its average cost of production has decreased, then it has: A diminishing returns. ) B economies of scale. ) C diseconomies of scale. ) D declining fixed costs. ) d3 Economies of scale exist because as a firm increases its 4) size in the long run: A the firm can afford more sophisticated technology in ) production. B labor and management can specialize their activities ) more. C ) as a larger input buyer the firm can purchase inputs at a lower per unit cost. D all of these. ) b3 In natural monopolies such as the generation of 5) electricity, long-run average costs continue to decrease as the plant size gets larger, because: A diminishing returns are not present. ) B diseconomies of scale are very minor but economies ) of scale continue. C someone must have made a mistake at lower levels ) of output. D there are no fixed costs. ) b3 When a firm's long-run average cost curve is horizontal 6) for a range of output, then in that range the firm has: A increasing returns to scale. ) B constant returns to scale. ) C decreasing returns to scale. ) D constant average fixed costs. ) b3 An isoquant shows: 7) A the combinations of two goods that yield the same ) total satisfaction. B the combinations of two inputs that yield the same ) total product. C the combinations of two inputs that cost the same ) total quantity of money. D the combination of two goods that cost the same ) amount of money. b3 The typical shape of isoquants is: 8) A concave towards the origin. ) B convex towards the origin. ) C straight downsloping line. ) D straight upsloping line. ) b3 As a firm substitutes labor for capital, more labor is 9) required to equal one less unit of capital because: A capital is always more productive than labor. ) B as less capital is used, diminishing returns to labor ) become more pronounced. C diseconomies of scale. ) D the price of each input changes. ) b4 An isocost line shows: 0) A ) all the combinations of two inputs the firm can use. possible B all the possible combinations of two inputs the firm ) can use that have the same total cost. C all the possible combinations of two inputs the firm ) can use that have the same marginal cost. D all the possible combinations of two inputs with ) constant returns to scale. c41 The position of the isocost line is determined by the: ) A prices of the two inputs. ) B productivities of the two inputs. ) C level of total cost. ) D price of the product. ) c42 On an isoquant/isocost graph the least cost combination ) of producing a given output is: A any point on the isoquant curve. ) B any point on the isocost curve. ) C the tangency point between the isoquant curve and ) the isocost line. D only on one of the axes of the graph. ) d4 Different economies might use different combinations 3) of inputs like labor and capital to produce the same goods because of: A different technologies. ) B differences in the productivity of the inputs. ) C differences in the prices of the inputs. ) D all of the above. ) a44 If labor is the horizontal axis input and physical capital ) is the vertical axis input, then at the least costs output: A the marginal rate of technical substitution is equal to ) the wage rate divided by the cost of capital. B the marginal rate of technical substitution is ) multiplied times the wage rate divided by the cost of capital. C the marginal rate of technical substitution is divided ) by the wage rate multiplied times the cost of capital. D the marginal rate of technical substitution is equal to ) the amount of capital divided by the amount of labor. b4 If the amount of labor being used has a marginal 5) product of 12 units of output per worker at a wage rate of $6 per worker and the current capital amount being used has a marginal product of 20 units per machine, then for this to be a least cost combination of inputs the cost of capital must be: A $2. ) B $10. ) C $20. ) D Impossible to determine with the information given. )