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Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 19 Chapter 6 Production and Cost Review Questions 2. Advantages to locating production in firms with employees, instead of independent contractors, include the following: • Firms enjoy gains from specialization and save on transaction costs as a result. Firms with employees can thus produce a given amount of output using fewer resources than they would using a collection of independent contractors. • The lower costs enjoyed by firms means they can charge lower prices than independent contractors and pay higher wages. • Owners of a firm can benefit from diversification—they can own shares in several firms, thus reducing their risk exposure in any one firm. 4. Bigger is not always better. Increased firm size creates several problems, such as greater difficulty and expense in communication, hiring, decision-making, and monitoring workers. In any industry, a point is reached where the advantages of further firm growth are outweighed by the disadvantages. 6. a. Fixed. Ordering and installing more ovens probably takes longer than a month. b. Variable. The furniture manufacturer will increase this input in step with the quantity of its output. c. Variable. Same reasoning as (b). d. Variable. When not covered under some long-term contract, labor is almost always a variable input. e. Probably variable in a month. Hertz can add cars to its fleet quickly; however, if governed by longer-term contracts with automakers, its fleet may be more of a fixed input over a month. 8. Fixed costs are the costs involved in purchasing a firm’s fixed inputs; variable costs are costs of obtaining a firm’s variable inputs. Using this classification: a. Variable. Steel is a variable input for GM that changes when output changes. b. Fixed. Rent does not vary with output. c. Variable. Varies with the number of papers printed, i.e., output. 10. While there is no logical necessity for the U shape of the typical LRATC curve, it seems to typify the cost structure of firms in a variety of industries. The downward sloping portion of the curve results from economies of scale. These are realized when long-run total cost rises proportionately less than output, due to gains from specialization or more efficient use of lumpy inputs. At some point, these economies are exhausted; however, as output continues to increase, diseconomies of scale are encountered. In this situation, long-run total cost rises more than in proportion to output. 20 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises Problems and Exercises 2. One reason why firms producing the same product merge is to take advantage of economies of scale. By merging, the owners can take advantage of the gains to be had from specialization and from more efficient use of lumpy inputs. A major reason firms merge with firms in unrelated areas of business is diversification. By not “putting all their eggs in one basket,” firms are not as exposed to as much risk should their primary business suffer a downturn. A good example is tobacco—when it was clear that public and government opinion had turned hostile to cigarette smoking, many tobacco firms bought out companies in totally unrelated businesses. If their cigarette business foundered, their other, unrelated businesses might still prosper. 4. The increase in demand for petroleum products must have increased their price. Since fuel is a major variable input for any airline, Continental’s MC, AVC, and ATC curves must have all shifted upward. Its AFC, however, would be unaffected, since fixed costs are the cost of fixed inputs such as hangars and aircraft. 6. Output 0 Capital 1 Labor 0 TFC $75 TVC $ 0 TC $75 30 1 1 75 50 125 70 1 2 75 100 175 MC AFC — AVC — ATC — $2.50 $1.67 $4.17 1.00 1.42 2.50 0.63 1.25 1.88 0.47 1.25 1.72 0.39 1.32 1.71 0.36 1.43 1.79 $1.67 1.25 1.00 120 1 3 75 150 225 160 1 4 75 200 275 1.25 1.67 190 1 5 75 250 325 210 1 6 75 300 375 2.50 a. Clean n’ Shine experiences increasing marginal returns to labor over the range of 0-120 units of output. It experiences decreasing marginal returns to labor at all output levels beyond 120. b. Yes. Average fixed costs fall as output rises. c. Yes. First, they all fall as output rises, then begin to rise as output continues to rise. d. Yes. AVC and ATC both fall until they intersect MC, and then the rising marginal costs pull them up. Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 8. 21 a. No. He can fill in the rest of the entries on his own. Units Number Output of of Per Day Capital Workers TFC 0 10 0 $1,000 TVC $0 TC $1,000 20,000 10 100 $1,000 $9,000 $10,000 40,000 10 133.3 $1,000 $12,000 $13,000 60,000 10 225 $1,000 $20,250 $21,250 MC $0.450 AFC AVC ATC - - - $0.050 $0.450 $0.500 $0.025 $0.300 $0.325 $0.017 $0.338 $0.355 $0.013 $0.325 $0.338 $0.150 $0.413 $0.288 80,000 10 289 $1,000 $26,000 $27,000 b. MC, AVC and ATC have the right relationship for an output below 60,000. However, when output increases from 60,000 to 80,000, the MC falls again, thus causing both AVC and ATC to fall. 10. Assume that each firm in the industry originally produced at its MES, shown by point A. The initial decrease in demand for personal computers pushed each firm up its LRATC curve to point B. Meanwhile, Dell’s cost-cutting innovations changed the shape of its LRATC curve, allowing it to achieve MES at a larger level of output. (The LRATC curves for Dell are shown in panel b. Dell originally operated at point A on its original cost curve, LRATC1. After its innovations changed the shape of its cost curve to LRATC2, Dell moved to point D.) This allowed Dell to cut prices for its personal computers, which further decreased demand for the other firms in the industry, pushing them further up their LRATC curves to point C. 12. If the LRATC curve lies above the demand curve at each and every quantity, there is no quantity at which a firm could cover its costs. The orphan drug will not be produced. 22 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises Challenge Questions 2. Whenever the MC curve is below ATC, ATC must fall, and whenever the MC curve is above ATC, then ATC must rise. Keeping this in mind, the MC curve would be graphed as: Economic Applications Exercises 2. a. There have been a significant number of technological advances that allow users to become more productive. b. There does seem to be a positive relationship between labor productivity and real GDP. c. These changes are likely to be long run, since they were the result of technological advances in production. As a result, they do not appear to be short-lived. Chapter 7 How Firms Make Decisions: Profit Maximization Review Questions 2. A firm can earn an accounting profit at the same time it is suffering an economic loss. For example, consider an entrepreneur who purchases $100,000 worth of raw materials and foregoes a salary of $50,000 to devote his time to his business. If his total revenues equal 120,000, he has earned an accounting profit of $20,000, and an economic loss of $30,000. It is not possible to earn an economic profit while at the same time suffer an accounting loss. 4. A market demand curve gives the quantity demanded by all consumers from all firms in the market for each price. The demand curve facing the firm gives the quantity demanded from a single firm. 6. a. The firm calculates profit as total revenue minus total cost and selects the output level that gives maximum profit. Graphically, the firm produces output where the vertical distance between the total revenue and total cost curve is greatest and where the total revenue curve lies above the total cost curve. b. The firm increases output when marginal revenue is above marginal cost and decreases output when marginal revenue is less than marginal cost. Graphically, the firm produces the level of output closest to where the marginal cost and marginal revenue curves intersect. Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 23 Problems and Exercises 2. a. Annual explicit costs: cost of office equipment: programmer’s salary: heat and light: total explicit costs: b. Annual implicit costs: salary foregone: investment income foregone: rent foregone: total explicit costs: $50 12 = $3,600 25,000 600 $29,200 $35,000 $10,000 .05 = $250 12 = c. Congratulations are not in order since $55,000 – ($29,200 + $38,500) = –$12,700. 500 3,000 $38,500 economic profit for the year is 4. The profit-maximizing level of output is 14, since the marginal revenue associated with the 14th unit equals the marginal cost of that unit ($25). When output rises from 14 to 15, the marginal revenue of the 15th unit ($23) is less than MC of that unit ($27). 6. a. If the firm’s fixed costs are $3,000 per day, then its variable costs are $7,000 - $3,000 = $4,000 per day. Since its total revenue is less than this amount, this firm should shut down in the short run. b. Since the firm is earning enough total revenue to cover these variable costs, it should continue to operate in the short run. 8. a. The tax hike does not affect Ned’s MC and MR curves. b. Ned should continue to produce 5 beds in the short run. c. Since the best that Ned can do is to earn a -$100 profit if he continues to operate, he should shut down and produce 0 beds in the long run. Challenge Questions 2. To answer this question, we need to compare the marginal revenue and marginal cost of the action. Marginal cost can be computed from average total cost by first computing total cost. Unit ATC TC 74 $10,000 $740,000 75 $12,000 $900,000 76 $14,000 $1,064,000 MC $160,000 $164,000 The marginal cost for the 76th unit is $164,000. Marginal revenue of the 76th unit is what Backus Electronics is offering to pay for it, or $150,000. Howell should not accept the offer since marginal cost exceeds marginal revenue. 24 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises Economics Applications Exercises 2. Sony’s decision highlights the impact – or lack thereof – of fixed costs on its production decision. By eliminating Ms. Carey’s contract, which can be considered a fixed cost, Sony can focus on lower-volume contracts, allowing it to increase profit there. Chapter 8 Perfect Competition Review Questions 2. Many markets are reasonably close to perfect competition, and by using the model of perfect competition, we can make valuable predictions about those markets. Perfect competition approximates and gives accurate enough predictions in a variety of markets. 4. The demand curve facing a perfectly competitive firm is infinitely elastic since a perfectly competitive firm is a price taker. If such a firm increases its price above the going market price, it would lose all of its customers; it won’t lower its price below the market price because it never has to (it can sell all the output it wants without lowering its price). 6. Comparing price and ATC tells us the firm’s profit per unit, which can then be multiplied by the number of units to obtain total profit. But the firm’s goal is to maximize total profit, not profit per unit; looking at price and ATC doesn’t tell us what level of output maximizes total profit. For this, we need to look at price and marginal cost. 8. a. Uncertain. When price exceeds minimum AVC, the firm will not shut down, but its profit could be positive (if P > ATC > AVC) or negative (if AVC < P < ATC). b. False. A competitive firm’s supply curve coincides with the marginal cost curve for all prices above the minimum point on the AVC curve. For all prices below the minimum point on the AVC curve, the supply curve is vertical at zero units of output. 10. False. Output increases in the long run as more firms enter the market. If the firms are entering a constant cost industry or a decreasing cost industry, the price will not increase. Problems and Exercises 2. Q TVC 0 $0 MC 6 1 3 TR Economic Profit $6 $6 $0 –$6 6 12 5 –7 6 17 10 –7 6 21 15 –6 5 15 4 TC 5 11 4 TFC 5 6 5 2 MR 5 (Continues) Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises Q TVC 4 18 MC 4 5 28 TFC TC TR Economic Profit 6 24 20 –4 6 28 25 –3 6 34 30 –4 5 22 6 6 MR 25 5 a. Set MR equal to MC when MC is rising to find Q* = 5 (assuming that only discrete units of output can be produced). The firm will not produce a 6th unit of output since the marginal cost of the 6th unit exceeds the marginal revenue from the sale of the 6th unit. b. Since the firm’s TC always exceeds its TR, its goal becomes to minimize its economic loss. This occurs at Q* = 5, where economic profit = –$3. 4. a. The market equilibrium price—where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded—is $2.00 per pound. Thus, each individual firm will face a price of $2.00, which is also its marginal revenue. From the total cost column, we can calculate that marginal cost is $1.00 per pound for increases from 60,000 to 61,000, and from 61,000 to 62,000. When output increases from 62,000 to 63,000, however, MC = $3.00. Since MR > MC for increases in output up to 62,000, but MR < MC beyond 62,000, the typical firm should produce 62,000 pounds. b. At 62,000 pounds, ATC = TC/Q = $112,000/62,000 = $1.81. Since P > ATC, the firm is earning a profit. Profit will attract entry, so this market is not in long-run equilibrium. c. The profit that the firm is earning will attract entry, so that the number of firms will increase. 6. Yes. In the short run, a higher price induces existing firms to produce more output, while in the long run, a higher price also induces entry. 8. In this situation, the technological advance shifts each firm’s ATC downward, leading to a temporary burst of profit. The profit will attract entry, shifting the market supply curve rightward. The new equilibrium will occur at point B, where there is a lower equilibrium price. The only difference between this situation and the one described in the Using the Theory section of this chapter is that the equilibrium quantity does not change when the market demand curve is inelastic. 26 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 10. a. Output 0 Price $50 Total Revenue $0 1 $50 $50 2 $50 $100 Marginal Revenue Total Cost $5 $50 $15 $150 $50 $45 $35 $90 $50 4 $10 $55 $50 $50 $200 Profit -$5 $35 $40 $50 3 Marginal Cost $60 $55 $145 $55 $65 This firm’s short run profit-maximizing quantity of output is 3, found by expanding output as long as marginal revenue exceeds marginal cost. This firm will earn a profit of $60. b. Output 0 Price $50 Total Revenue $0 Marginal Revenue Total Cost $10 $50 1 $50 $50 $50 $45 $100 $50 $150 4 $50 $200 $5 $15 $60 $50 3 Profit -$10 $35 $50 2 Marginal Cost $40 $35 $95 $50 $55 $55 $150 $50 $50 $65 The firm’s profit-maximizing quantity of output stays at 3 units, but its profit falls to $55. c. Output 0 Price $50 Total Revenue $0 1 $50 $50 Marginal Revenue Total Cost $5 $50 $50 $100 $50 $95 $150 $50 $5 $55 $150 $50 4 -$10 $35 $50 3 $200 $0 $75 $225 $50 Profit -$5 $55 $60 $50 2 Marginal Cost -$25 $85 The firm’s profit-maximizing quantity of output falls to 2 units, and its profit falls to $5. Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 27 Challenge Questions 2. a. At point A in panel (a), the market is in long-run equilibrium. The typical firm in panel (b) earns zero economic profit. If demand increases, market price rises. Individual firms increase output and earn an economic profit. Profit attracts entry, increasing market supply, while ATC does not change. When long-run equilibrium is reestablished at point C in panel (c), price has returned to P1, and the typical firm again earns zero economic profit. b. Instead of being upward-sloping, the long-run market supply curve is a horizontal line found by connecting points like A and C in panel (c). More output is offered at point C, because, although each firm in the industry is producing the same quantity of output as they were at price P1, there are now more firms in the industry. 28 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 4. Banning a technology that is in common use in a competitive industry may increase ATC. In panel (b), firms will earn an economic loss at output level q1. This economic loss will lead to exit, shifting the supply curve in panel (a) from S1 to S2. As supply decreases, the price rises until each firm is once again earning zero economic profit. Economic Applications Exercises 2. Price MC MR2 MR1 Quantity As more and more farmers lose production due to weather-related circumstances, market supply falls, raising the market price. Those farmers still in the market see their marginal revenue increase. Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 29 Chapter 9 Monopoly Review Questions 2. Monopolies arise because of barriers to entry such as economies of scale, control of a scarce input, or barriers created by government. Economies of scale over a very large range of output are a barrier to entry since they mean that one firm can produce at a lower cost per unit than can two or more firms. If a firm has control of a scarce input needed for production, other firms may not be able to enter that market. Finally, when a government believes that it is in the public’s interest to have a single seller, it will prevent entry. 4. The CEO is wrong to believe that he can set any price he wants and sell as many units as he wants at that price. Once the CEO decides what price he wants to sell at, the demand curve will dictate how much output can be sold at that price. Conversely, the CEO may decide how much output he wants to sell, and the demand curve will give the maximum price at which he can sell that output. 6. Unlike a perfectly competitive firm, a monopoly will not always shut down if price is less than AVC. If the monopoly provides goods or services considered vital, the government may not let it shut down. Also, the monopoly may not shut down if it views the situation of price less than AVC as temporary. For example, the monopoly may endure losses in the short run if it feels that doing so will promote the goodwill of its customers and profits in the long run. 8. In perfect competition, the market supply curve gives the marginal cost of producing one more unit of output at each of the perfectly competitive firms. When the monopoly takes over, it will produce output at one of the previously competitive firms, and the marginal cost of producing that output will be the same as it was for the previously perfectly competitive firms. Thus, the marginal cost for the monopoly will be the dollar amount given by the competitive market supply curve. 10. For a given technology of production, monopolies charge higher prices and produce lower output than perfectly competitive firms. Monopolies may, however, be able to change the technology of production and shift down the marginal cost curve. This would cause prices to fall and output to increase. The net effect depends on the strength of each of these forces. 12. A single-price monopoly charges the same price to everyone, while a price-discriminating monopoly charges different prices to different customers for reasons other than differences in production costs. In order for a monopoly to price discriminate, it must face a downward-sloping demand curve; it must be able to identify consumers who are willing to pay more, and it must be able to prevent low-price consumers from reselling to high-price consumers. A downwardsloping demand curve means that there are some customers who are willing to pay for the product at a higher price. To charge some consumers a higher price, the firm must be able to identify those who are willing to do so. Finally, if low-price customers could resell the product to high-price customers, then no one would pay the high price to the firm, so price discrimination would be impossible. 30 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises Problems and Exercises 2. $ $ d = MR D MR Quantity Perfectly competitive Quantity Monopoly firm a. In perfect competition, the market demand curve is downward sloping, while the demand curve facing an individual firm is horizontal, indicating that it is a price taker. In monopoly, the market demand curve and the demand curve facing the firm are both the same—a downward-sloping curve. b. In perfect competition, the firm’s marginal revenue curve coincides with its demand curve, since every unit is sold at the same price. In the case of a monopoly, the marginal revenue curve lies below the demand curve, and both curves are downward sloping. To sell an additional unit of output, the monopoly must lower the price on that unit and all previous units of output. 4. For a perfect price discriminator, the marginal revenue curve is the same as the demand curve. While a single-price monopoly must lower the price on all units of output if it wants to sell another unit, a perfect-price discriminator only has to lower the price on the additional unit that she wants to sell. This implies that the price-discriminating monopolist’s revenue rises by the price of the additional unit, so the marginal revenue curve coincides with the demand curve. Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 31 6. The marginal revenue curve was drawn under the assumption that No-Choice Airline charges a single price. When No-Choice begins charging two different prices, there is a different marginal revenue curve. Firms still equate MR and MC to find output, but with price discrimination, marginal revenue is different for different types of consumers. Equating MR and MC for the different types of consumers will give the level of output that the firm should allocate to each type. 8. a. You will tutor two students, and will charge them each $35, for total weekly earnings of $70. b. You will tutor four students, charging each student the highest price they are willing to pay. That is, you will charge prices of $40, $35, $27, and $26. Your total weekly earnings will be $128. c. No, because your total revenue ($70) from two students will be less than your total costs ($75). d. Yes, because your total revenue ($128) from these four students will be more than your total costs ($125). 10. A technological change that reduced only the monopolist’s fixed costs would shift only its ATC curve downward. If the new ATC curve fell below point E at Q*, then the monopolist would no longer incur an economic loss, and would no longer have an incentive to shut down. For example, if the ATC curve shifted to ATC2, the monopolist would produce at Q*, and would earn the economic profit shown by the shaded area. 32 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises A technological change that reduced the monopolist’s variable costs, while leaving its fixed costs alone, would shift its AVC, MC, and ATC curves downward. If these curves shifted down by enough to allow the firm to cover its average total costs at its new profit-maximizing quantity of output, the firm would not have to go out of business. (The graph shows the case where the technological change will allow the monopolist to earn zero profits.) Challenge Questions 2. Setting MR = 20 – 8Q and MC = Q2 equal to each other, we have 20 – 8Q = Q2, or Q2 + 8Q – 20 = 0. This is a quadratic equation with solution Q = 2. Economics Applications Exercises 2. a. A menu of prices allows a firm to discriminate among consumers, hoping to charge those willing to pay a higher price more, allowing them to increase their profit. b. If a firm price discriminates, then it can charge higher prices to those with lower price elasticity of demand. For those with higher price elasticities, firms will charge lower prices. c. If an online company can place an individual within a particular category – student; longtime customer; large wish list but no purchases; etc – then it can charge different prices to different individuals. Because a person is only in one group, and not the others, it does not know what other prices are available. Chapter 10 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly Review Questions 2. False. In the long run, a monopolistic competitor will not produce at minimum ATC. In long-run equilibrium, there are too many firms producing too little output to achieve minimum ATC. 4. In oligopoly there are fewer firms than in perfect competition or monopolistic competition, but more than in monopoly. Unlike perfectly or monopolistically competitive markets, there are barriers to entry and exit. 6. In a natural monopoly, economies of scale extend over a wide-enough range of output that the lowest cost per unit is attained when a single firm produces for the entire market. In a natural oligopoly, economies of scale do not extend over as wide a range of output, allowing more than one competitor to enter. Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 33 8. Difficulty observing other firms’ prices, unstable market demand, and a large number of firms promote cheating—since they lessen the probability of detection. In addition, unstable market demand means new terms for collusion must be periodically renegotiated, giving firms the opportunity to cheat in the interim. Finally, if many firms are involved in collusion, any individual firm may face a smaller chance of getting caught and facing punishment, thereby increasing the probability of cheating. 10. New technologies limit the degree of concentration in an industry by creating new substitute goods and by breaking down barriers to entry. Two examples are cable television and local phone companies; both face new competition made possible by technological advances (satellite dishes in the case of cable TV, and cell phones in the case of local phone companies). 12. It is difficult to apply the definition of oligopoly to real-world markets since doing so involves defining the relevant market, deciding what number qualifies as “a few,” and deciding whether market domination by a few firms occurs. Problems and Exercises 2. Initially, the monopolist earns an economic profit by producing where MR = MC. Entry will occur, shifting the firm’s demand and marginal revenue curves leftward (to D2 and MR2). Long run equilibrium will occur at a point like B, where the firm earns zero economic profit. 4. a. Price per Taco Plate $5 Taco plates per Week 50 Total Cost per Week $30 Total Revenue per Week $250 4 80 $50 $320 3 150 $176 $450 2 800 $1476 $1600 Marginal Revenue Marginal Cost $2.33 $0.67 $1.86 $1.80 $1.77 $2.00 34 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises -$1.67 1 1100 $2136 $2.20 $1100 Tino should expand his output as long as MR exceeds MC. His profit-maximizing price is $3 and his profit-maximizing number of taco plates is 150. b. Tino’s customers will substitute away from Tino’s tacos towards food from his competitor. Demand for Tino’s tacos will fall, and Tino’s profits will fall. c. Price per Taco Plate $5 Taco plates per Week 60 Total Cost per Week $130 Total Revenue per Week $300 4 96 $150 $384 3 180 $276 $540 2 960 $1576 $1920 1 1320 $2236 $1320 Marginal Revenue Marginal Cost $2.33 $0.55 $1.86 $1.50 $1.76 $1.66 -$1.67 $1.83 Tino’s profit-maximizing price is $2, and his profit-maximizing number of taco plates is 960. Since Tino earns an economic profit of $344 with this combination, entry will occur until Tino’s economic profit falls to $0. 6. a. The typical plastics firm produces the output level where MC = MR, charges the corresponding price given by the demand curve, and earns zero economic profit. Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises 35 b. Oil is a variable input, so when oil prices increase, the ATC curve and the MC curve at all firms shift upward. In the short run, the typical plastics firm suffers economic losses. c. If prices remained high, and profits remained negative, some firms would exit. Other firms would experience a rightward shift of their demand curves, and in long-run equilibrium, the remaining firms would earn zero economic profit. 8. a. In the payoff matrices below, Road Kill’s payoffs are listed on the left side of each square: Sal Monella Clean up Don't Cleanup 5,000 3,000 Clean up 5,000 12,000 Road Kill Café 12,000 7,000 Don't Cleanup 3,000 7,000 b. Both Road Kill Café and Sal Monella have a dominant strategy to clean up. c. If Road Kill Café and Sal Monella act independently, they’ll both clean up and earn $5,000. d. When facing the same decision repeatedly, Sal Monella and Road Kill Café might decide to cooperate. By both agreeing to not clean up, they can each increase their income to $7,000 each. 36 Solutions to Even-Numbered, End-of-Chapter Questions, Problems, and Exercises e. Sal Monella Clean up Don't Cleanup 5,000 3,000 Clean up 5,000 6,000 Road Kill Café 6,000 7,000 Don't Cleanup 3,000 7,000 The restaurants no longer have dominant strategies. For example, Road Kill’s best action now depends on what Sal Monella chooses. Without cooperation, we would need a more sophisticated analysis to predict an outcome. With cooperation, however, the firms will decide not to clean up, and each will earn $7000. 10. a. Nike has a dominant strategy to go “high.” Adidas does not have a dominant strategy. b. This game will still have an outcome: Adidas can determine that Nike will go high, so it will go high also. c. Nike would choose the outrageously high price if it believed that Adidas would follow. Nike would earn $1.2 million in profits and Adidas would earn $600,000 in profits. While Nike would have an incentive to charge the high price if Adidas charged the outrageously high price, Nike would know that Adidas would follow Nike’s pricing, and this would reduce Nike’s profit. Therefore, the outcome of the game with Nike as price leader is that both charge the outrageously high price. Challenge Questions 2. a. Neither player has a dominant strategy. b. The outcome of the game cannot be determined from the information in the payoff matrix using the tools learned in this chapter. c. Player 2 has a dominant strategy; it is to choose “B”. When one player has a dominant strategy, we can predict the outcome. Since Player 1 knows that Player 2 will choose “B,” Player 1 will maximize his payoff by also choosing “B.” Economics Applications Exercises 2. a. Answers may vary. b. Answers may vary. c. Answers may vary.