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Microeconomics Section I Time –70 Minutes 60 Questions 1. Scarcity is correctly described by which of the following statements? I. Scarcity exists if there are more uses for resources than can be satisfied at one time. II. Scarcity exists if decisions must be made about alternative uses for resources. III. Scarcity would not exist in a society in which people wanted to help others instead of themselves. (A) I only (B) II only (C) III only (D) I and II only (E) I, II, and III 4. The diagram above shows the demand and supply curves for a product. The equilibrium price could rise from P1 to P2 if (A) consumers’ incomes increased (B) P2 were set as a legal maximum (C) subsidies for producers increased (D) the price of a complementary product increased (E) costs of production were substantially lowered 2. Which of the following situations would necessarily lead to an increase in the price of peaches? (A) The wage paid to peach farm workers rises at the same time that medical researchers find that eating peaches reduces the chances of a person’s developing cancer. (B) While the wages of peach farm workers fall drastically, the peach industry launches a highly successful advertising campaign for peaches. (C) A breakthrough in technology enables peach farmers to use the same amount of resources as before to produce more peaches per acre. (D) The prices of apples and oranges fall. (E) Weather during the growing season is ideal for peach production. 5. A perfectly competitive producer of steel rods and steel beams employs 100 workers with identical skills. If steel rods and steel beams sell for the same price, which of the following rules should the producer always follow to use the 100 workers efficiently? I. Allocate workers so that the average cost of producing beams equals the average cost of producing rods. II. Allocate workers so that the marginal product of labor is the same in both rod production and beam production. III. Allocate half the workers to rod production and half the workers to beam production. (A) I only (B) II only (C) III only (D) II and III only (E) I, II, and III 3. If the marginal cost curve of a monopolist shifts up, which of the following will occur to the monopolist’s price and output? Price Output (A) Decrease Increase (B) Decrease Decrease (C) Increase No change (D) Increase Increase (E) Increase Decrease GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 1 6. Assume a consumer finds that his total expenditure on compact disks stays the same after the price of compact disks declines, other things being equal. Which of the following is true for this price change? (A) Compact disks are inferior goods to this consumer. (B) The consumer’s demand for compact disks increased in response to the price change. (C) The consumer’s demand for compact disks is perfectly price elastic. (D) The consumer’s demand for compact disks is perfectly price inelastic. (E) The consumer’s demand for compact disks is unit price elastic. Questions 10-11 refer to the following diagram and assume a perfectly competitive market structure. 10. At the price 0A, economic profits are (A) ABJG (B) ABKH (C) ABLI (D) ACMG (E) C0FM 7. A firm uses workers and seed to grow lettuce. Its output rises from 100 tons to 200 tons when the number of workers increases from 25 to 75. Its production process shows A. decreasing returns to scale B. diminishing returns to labor C. increasing returns to scale D. increasing returns to labor E. increasing long-run average cost 11. In the short run, the firm will stop production when the price falls below (A) 0A (B) 0B (C) 0C (D) 0D (E) 0E 12. If the chemical industry in an area has been dumping its toxic waste free of charge into a river, government action to ensure a more efficient use of resources would have which of the following effects on the industry’s output and product price? Output Price (A) Decrease Decrease (B) Decrease Increase (C) Increase Decrease (D) Increase Increase (E) Increase No change 8. For a firm buying labor in a perfectly competitive labor market, the marginal revenue product curve slopes downward after some point because as more of a factor is employed, which of the following declines? (A) Marginal product (B) Marginal factor cost (C) Marginal cost (D) Total output (E) Wage rates 13. A market is clearly not perfectly competitive if which of the following is true in equilibrium? (A) Price exceeds marginal cost. (B) Price exceeds average variable cost. (C) Price exceeds average fixed cost. (D) Price equals opportunity cost. (E) Accounting profits are positive. 9. Which of the following is always true of the relationship between average and marginal costs? (A) Average total costs are increasing when marginal costs are increasing. (B) Marginal costs are increasing when average variable costs are higher than marginal costs. (C) Average variable costs are increasing when marginal costs are increasing. (D) Average variable costs are increasing when marginal costs are higher than average variable costs. (E) Average total costs are constant when marginal costs are constant. GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 2 Questions 14–15 are based on the following information and diagram. Assume that the original supply and demand curves of a commodity are S and D, respectively. Also assume that the government imposes an excise tax (per unit tax) of t dollars on the commodity, which shifts the supply curve to Sl. 17. If a perfectly competitive industry is in long-run equilibrium, which of the following is most likely to be true? (A) Some firms can be expected to leave the industry. (B) Individual firms are not operating at the minimum points on their average total cost curves. (C) Firms are earning a return on investment that is equal to their opportunity costs. (D) Some factors are not receiving a return equal to their opportunity costs. (E) Consumers can anticipate price increases. 18. From the point of view of economic efficiency, a monopolist produces (A) too much of a good and charges too low a price (B) too much of a good and charges too high a price (C) too little of a good and charges too low a price (D) too little of a good and charges too high a price (E) the socially optimal amount of a good 14. The total amount of tax collected by the government is equal to (A) t x Q0 (B) t x Ql (C) P0P1JK (D) P0P1GH (E) P0P2IH Questions 19–21 are based on the chart below, which gives a firm’s total cost of producing different levels of output. Output Total Cost 0 $13 1 20 2 25 3 28 4 32 5 43 6 60 15. Which of the following bears the total tax burden? (A) The consumers bear it. (B) The producers bear it. (C) The consumers and the producers each bear a part of it. (D) The group that legally pays the tax bears it. (E) The government bears it. 16. A President’s claim that the United States could increase its defense budget without sacrificing any of its domestic programs would be correct if (A) the United States economy were producing at its full potential (B) the United States economy were operating on its production possibilities frontier (C) the United States economy were centrally planned (D) some resources were not being fully employed (E) the production possibilities frontier for the U.S. economy would shift to the left. 19. The marginal cost of producing the fourth unit of output is (A) $ 4 (B) $11 (C) $19 (D) $32 (E) impossible to determine from the information given GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 3 20. The total variable cost of producing five units of output is (A) $ 6 (B) $11 (C) $30 (D) $43 (E) impossible to determine from the information given 24. In an oligopolistic industry: A. firms behave strategically B. output is produced at minimum average total cost C. firms make price and output decisions without regard to the responses of their rivals D. high profits will attract many new entrants to the industry E. firms don’t have the ability to collude 21. The profit-maximizing level of output for this firm is (A) 2 (B) 3 (C) 4 (D) 5 (E) impossible to determine from the information given 22. Compared to perfect competition, monopolistic competition: A. provides greater product differentiation at the cost of some excess capacity. B. offers less product differentiation but attains equal productive efficiency. C. provides greater product differentiation and achieves greater productive efficiency. D. offers less product differentiation and lower productive efficiency. E. is more efficient in the long-run 25. Refer to the diagrams. Zero long-run economic profits are most likely to occur in markets illustrated by: A. Figure A only B. Figure B only C. Figures B and C D. Figures C and D E. Figures B and D 23. The table given below shows how many tons can be produced in India and Canada with one unit of input. To achieve gains from specialization: Uranium (ton) India 10 Canada 40 Coal (ton) 10 20 26. Increasing the tax rate for the poor without changing the taxes the rich pay will: A. Cause the Lorenz Curve to move closer to the 45-degree line. B. Cause the Lorenz Curve to move further away from the 45-degree line. C. It will not have any affect on the Lorenz Curve. D. It will insure that the Lorenz Curve is on the 45degree line. E. Decrease the demand for inferior goods A. India should export Coal to Canada and import Canadian Uranium. B. India should export Uranium to Canada and import Canadian Coal. C. Canada should produce both Uranium and Coal and not trade with India. D. India should produce both Uranium and Coal and not trade with Canada. E. They should not trade. GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 4 27. A production possibility frontier that is represented by a straight line rather than the usual bowed shape would indicate; A. Increasing opportunity cost B. Decreasing opportunity cost C. Constant opportunity cost D. Absolute and Comparative Advantage E. Comparative but not absolute advantage Figure 3 30. Chasey Company Inc. is the only producer in a small town. Cost and revenue information for the Chasey Company are shown in Figure 3. Chasey Company would set the price of its product at; A. $7.50 B. $6.00 C. $4.50 D. $3.75 E. $3.00 31. In Figure 3 the Chasey Company would maximize profits by producing a quantity of; A. 60 B. 100 C. 120 D. 140 E. 170 Figure 1 28. If the current price for the perfectly competitive firm represented in Figure 1 is $10.00, what would be the result of an increase in fixed cost on the firm’s profit maximizing price and quantity? A. Price increase and Quantity increase B. Price increase and Quantity decrease C. Price constant and Quantity constant D. Price decrease and Quantity decrease E. Price decrease and Quantity increase 32. In Figure 3 the Chasey Company will make a profit of _______; A. $750 B. $450 C. $300 D. $150 E. $150 loss 29. If a legal price ceiling is established on a good above the existing equilibrium price, the effect would be to: A. Raise the price of the good and lower the quantity purchased B. Have no effect on the price or quantity of the good C. Lower the price of the good and lower the quantity purchased D. Raise the price of the good and raise the quantity purchased E. Lower the price of the good and increase the quantity purchased GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 5 Figure 4 Number of workers 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Output 0 5 11 19 25 29 31 31 30 33. In Figure 4 the law of diminishing returns sets in with the addition of the _____ worker. A. 1 B. 2 C. 4 D. 7 E. 8 Figure 5 37. The profit-maximizing price for a perfectly competitive firm like the one shown in Figure 5 in the long run would be; A. A B. B C. C D. D E. E 34 Using the data in Figure 4, if workers are paid $35 and the product being produced sells for $10, how many workers would the Chasey Company hire? A. 1 B. 4 C. 5 D. 7 E. 8. 38. In Figure 5 at a market price of A, the profitmaximizing output for a perfectly competitive firm is A. 0 B. 1 C. 2 D. 3 E. 4 35. Other things equal, the demand for labor will be more elastic: A. the greater the demand for the product B. the more substitutable labor is with other inputs C. the higher the price of capital D. the smaller the elasticity of product demand E. the higher the interest rate 39. If a natural disaster occurs that adversely affects production and shipping, A. the firm’s supply curve will shift to the right B. the firm’s demand curve will shift to the right C. the firm’s demand curve will shift to the left D. the firm’s supply curve will shift to the left E. Neither curve will shift, but instead movement will be along each curve 36. Suppose you consume two goods, a and b, such that MUa/Pa < MUb/Pb, then you: A. can never maximize utility. B. have maximized total utility. C. can increase utility by buying more of b and less of a. D. can increase utility by buying more of a and less of b. E. are experiencing the law of diminishing marginal utility GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 6 40. The government has imposed a tax on the producers of good X and has subsidized the consumers of good Y. If these policies result in the production of the efficient amounts of both goods, it is likely the government is correcting for: A. Good X is being produced by a monopoly whereas good Y is being produced in a perfectly competitive firm B. spillover costs in producing X and spillover benefits in consuming Y C. spillover benefits in producing X and spillover costs in consuming Y D. spillover benefits in producing X and consuming Y E. spillover costs in producing X and consuming Y 43. If supply and demand both increase, we can correctly conclude that I. Equilibrium price will rise II. Equilibrium price is indeterminate III. Equilibrium quantity will rise IV. Equilibrium quantity is indeterminate A. B. C. D. E. 44. For a firm that both sells its output and buys its inputs in purely competitive markets, the labor demand curve: A. slopes downward and the labor supply curve is perfectly elastic B. slopes downward and the labor supply curve is upward sloping C. is perfectly inelastic and their labor supply is downward sloping D. is perfectly elastic and the labor supply curve is upward sloping E. is perfectly elastic and the labor supply curve is perfectly inelastic Figure 7 Assume that the following information is for Good A. Price of Good A $5.00 $4.00 $3.00 $2.00 $1.00 Income of Consumers of Good A $200 $175 $150 $125 $100 I only I and III only II and IV only II and III only I and IV only Quantity demanded of Good A 20 40 60 90 100 41. What would be the effect on total revenue of changing the price from $5.00 to $4.00, based on the information in Figure 7? A. Increase by $160 B. Increase by $100 C. Increase by $60 D. Decrease by $700 E. Decrease by $300 45. If an increase in the price of one good increases the demand for another good, then these two goods are A. regular goods B. substitute goods C. public goods D. complementary goods E. independent goods 46. The necessity for a monopoly to lower its price in order to sell more units of its product explains why A. monopolies are common among public utilities B. the marginal revenue curve is below the demand curve for a monopoly C the marginal cost curve for a monopoly slopes upward D. monopolies are able to maintain market power E. monopolies differ from monopolistically competitive firms. 42. Based on the information in Figure 7 it can be correctly concluded that good A is A. A normal good B. An inferior good C. A exterior good D. A good with a positive externality E. A good with a negative externality GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 7 47. Game theory, and price leadership are explanations for the profit-maximizing behavior of a firm under which of the following market structures? A. Pure monopoly B. Oligopoly C. Monopolistic competition D. Perfect competition E. All of the above market structures 50. If one firm in a perfectly competitive industry experiences a technological breakthrough that lowers only that firm’s cost of production, which of the following correctly describes the effect on this firm’s price, quantity, and profit? Price Quantity Profit A. decrease decrease decrease B. decrease increase increase C no change decrease increase D no change increase increase E increase increase increase 51. In the factor market, which of the following would happen if the workers became more productive and at the same time the price of the product fell? A. The value of the marginal product of labor would increase B. The value of the marginal product of labor would decrease C. The value of the marginal product of labor would be indeterminate D. The demand for labor would shift to the right E. The demand for labor would shift to the left 52. Which of the following would contribute to a reduction in consumer surplus? A. imposition of an effective price floor B. imposition of an effective price ceiling C. an increase in supply D. a decrease in equilibrium price E. all of the above would contribute to a reduction in consumer surplus Figure 9 48. Which graph in Figure 9 shows the long-run profit maximizing position for a monopolistic competitor? A. A B. B C. C D. D E. E 53. Karen’s Karmel Korn produces a type of caramel corn candy. Caramel, an ingredient in caramel corn, increases in price by 10%. Which of the following correctly describes the effect that this increase will have on the cost of production? A. only marginal cost will increase B. only marginal cost and average total cost will increase C. marginal cost, average variable cost, average total cost will increase D. marginal cost, average total cost, and average fixed cost will increase E. marginal cost, average variable cost, average total cost, and average fixed cost will increase 49. Which of the following is a progressive tax? A. Every taxpayer pays $10.00 B. Every taxpayer pays 10% of his/her income C. Higher income taxpayers pay a higher percent of their income in tax D. Higher income taxpayers pay a lower percent of their income in tax E. None of the above correctly describes a progressive tax GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 8 54. The derived demand concept suggests that an increase in the demand for computers will: A. increase the demand for computer software B. decrease the demand for typewriters C. increase the price of computers D. increase the demand for microchip design engineers E. increase the supply of computer manufacturers 58. Which of the following correctly describes a perfectly competitive firm’s short run supply curve? A. marginal cost curve B. rising portion of the marginal cost curve C. rising portion of the marginal cost curve above equilibrium D. rising portion of the marginal cost curve above average variable cost E. rising portion of the marginal cost curve above average total cost 55. There are two generally recognized measures of economic efficiency; one measures efficiency from a production perspective and the other measures efficiency from an allocation perspective. Which of the following correctly states these two measures of efficiency, and in the order mentioned in the question? A. P = minimum ATC, and P = AR B. P = minimum ATC, and P = MC C. P = MC, and P = minimum ATC D. P = MC, and P = AR E. MC = MR, and MRP = VMP 59. A price discriminating monopolist would differ from a non-price discriminating monopolist in which of the following ways? Profit Consumer surplus A higher w/ price higher w/ price discrimination discrimination B higher w/ price lower w/ price discrimination discrimination C lower w/ price lower w/ price discrimination discrimination D lower w/ price higher w/ price discrimination discrimination E the same with both the same with both 60. Suppose the only three members of society will receive marginal benefits from a proposed public project equal to $300, $500, and $800, respectively. However, each must pay taxes of $400 to pay for the total cost. In the absence of vote trading, a majority rule vote will: A. pass this project and resources will be allocated efficiently B. pass this project and resources will be overallocated to the project C. defeat this project and resources will be allocated efficiently D. defeat this project and resources will be underallocated to the project E. not enough information to determine what would happen. Figure 14 Quantity Average Average Marginal of Output Variable Cost Total Cost Cost 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 50 45 41.7 40 40 40.8 42.1 44.3 250 145 108.4 90 80 74.1 70.7 69.3 50 40 35 35 40 45 50 60 56. Refer to Figure 14. The average fixed cost of producing 4 units of output is: A. 35 B. 40 C.50 D. 90 E. 200 57. Refer to Figure 14. If the product’s price is constant at $47.00, to maximize profits this firm will produce: A. zero, the firm will lose money by producing any level of output B. zero in the short run, but 6 in the long run C. zero in the long run, but 6 in the short run D. 1 in the short run, but 7 in the long run E. 7 in the long run, but 1 in the short run GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 9 49. C 50. D 51. C 52. A 53. C 54. D 55. B 56. E 57. C 58. D 59. B 60. A Answer Key 1. D 2. A 3. E 4. A 5. B 6. E 7. B 8. A 9. D 10. B 11. D 12. B 13. A 14. B 15. C 16. D 17. C 18. D 19. A 20. C 21. E 22. A 23. A 24. A 25. E 26. B 27. C 28. C 29. B 30. A 31. B 32. C 33. C 34. C 35. B 36. C 37. D 38. A 39. D 40. B 41. C 42. B 43. D 44. A 45. B 46. B 47. B 48. B GO ON TO NEXT PAGE 10