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Amherst College Department of Economics Economics 111 Section 5 Fall 2015 Name: _________________________ P.O. Box _______________ Quiz 1: Solutions Year 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1. Calculators Price Quantity ($/calculator) (millions) 320 1 200 5 100 12 50 20 40 23 35 24 Production Cost Data Semiconductor Display Assembly chip ($/chip) ($/digit) time (min) 15.00 1.00 30 3.00 .30 5 Review questions: a. As a consequence of market forces, how would you expect the quantity demanded and quantity supplied in each year to be related? Explain. Quantity demanded equals quantity supplied When there’s a shortage market forces cause the price to rise; alternative there’s a surplus market forces cause the price to fall. Therefore, as a consequence of market forces the quantity demanded will equal the quantity supplied. b. Consider the graph below that plots the quantity and price for each year. As a consequence of market forces, what does each year’s point in the graph represent? The equilibrium. c. For each year, where do the demand curve and supply curve intersect? At the equilibrium. Explain. In each year, there was neither a shortage nor a surplus. Hence, the market was in equilibrium in each year. The demand and supply curves for each year intersect at the point representing that year. 2 2. Focus on the market demand curve a, Is the demand curve downward sloping or upward sloping? Downward ____ X Upward ____. Explain. The demand curve is downward sloping; when a good becomes more expensive, consumers purchase less. b. Based on the points plotted, did the demand curve have to shift from 1971 to 1976 or could the demand curve have remained stationary during these years? Explain. Had to shift ____ Could have remained stationary ____ X Explain. The demand curve did not have to shift. We can draw a single downward sloping curve through all six points. c. Do the data appearing above include any information suggesting that the demand curve shifted? Yes ____ No ____ X . Explain. Since the demand curve shifts only when something relevant to the demand for the good other than the price changes. Based on our information there is no reason to believe that such a change occurred. d. Draw a demand curve consistent with your answers in the graph below: P ($/calculator) 1971 300 D1971-1976 1972 200 1973 100 1974 5 10 15 (millions of calculators) 20 1975 1976 25 Q 3 3. Focus on the market supply curve a, Is the supply curve downward sloping or upward sloping? Downward ___ Upward ____ X . Explain. The supply curve is an upward sloping curve: when a good becomes more expensive, it becomes a more profitable item for firms to produce – firms respond by producing more. b. Based on the points plotted, did the supply curve have to shift from 1971 to 1976 or could the demand curve have remained stationary during these years? Had to shift ____ X Could have remained stationary ____ Explain. There is no way to draw an upward sloping supply curve through the points. c. Do the data appearing above include any information suggesting that the supply curve shifted? Yes ____ X No ____. Explain. Yes. The supply curve can shift only when something relevant to supply other than the price of pocket calculators themselves change. This in fact occurred. The data suggest that it became cheaper to produce calculators. Consequently, the supply curve shifted rightward. d. Draw a supply curve consistent with your answers in the graph below: P ($/calculator) S1971 S1972 1971 300 S1973 1972 200 S1974 S1975 1973 100 S1976 1974 5 4. 10 15 (millions of calculators) 1975 1976 20 Q 25 On the graph below, superimpose the market demand and supply curves. P ($/calculator) S1972 S1971 1971 300 D1971-76 S1973 1972 200 S1974 S1975 1973 100 1974 5 10 15 (millions of calculators) 20 S1976 1975 1976 25 Q