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Use Supply and Demand to answer the following questions. Delphi Automotive, a major Automotive Parts Supplier (a company that supplies the parts used to assemble a car) recently went bankrupt. While the factories still exist, they are all closed while the company is sorted out, and will not re-open for a long time. This has caused a major disruption in the manufacture of U.S. cars. Using supply and demand, explain; 1. What will this bankruptcy do to the supply and demand of U.S. produced cars, in the U.S.? Supply will shift in, as the auto parts are an input into the production process. So the equilibrium price of cars will go up, and the quantity demanded will go down. 2. What will this do to the supply of, and demand for, Japanese cars sold in the U.S.? Since the price of U.S. cars has gone up, and they are a substitute good for Japanese cars, the demand for Japanese cars will shift out. This will increase the equilibrium price, and the equilibrium quantity, of Japanese cars in the U.S. market. 3. Several Thai companies are capable of manufacturing the same items that Delphi Automotive did. What will happen to the supply and demand for automotive parts in the U.S. if the Thai companies can quickly start supplying the parts from their factories? If the thai companies can quickly supply the parts to the U.S. manufactures, then they can replace the parts that the U.S. manufactures can’t produce, but that U.S. manufacturers still want. You could model this in one of two ways redraw supply of car parts as very elastic, so the effects on graph 1 and 2 would be small, (and explain that the new quantity is composed of foreign parts), or you could shift the demand for U.S. parts INWARDS, since Thai parts are now coming in, presumably at a cheaper price. 4. What would be different about the above answer if it would instead take a long time for Thai companies to begin supplying the parts to U.S. automakers? Then not much happens in the short term, but you get the same effects in the long term. Then tell me something about expectations. Using Supply and Demand, model and explain the following…. Page 1 of 6 D:\148087708.doc The demand for eggs is price - inelastic. However, the cross price-elasticity of eggs and bacon is high (elastic). Illustrate and explain what will happen in the egg market, if the government puts a tax on Bacon. If the government taxes Bacon, and we assume the supply and demand for bacon has normal elasticities, the price of bacon to the consumer will go up. Since bacon and eggs are complements, when the price of bacon goes up, the demand for eggs shifts inwards. What will happen to the price and market clearing quantity of THAI WIVES IN THAILAND, if demand for thai wives by Chinese men goes up? A war in the middle east cuts off the supply of oil to the rest of the world. What will happen to the price, and market clearing quantity, of oil in the short run. In the long run, what will happen? What effect would a price floor on Rice, set above the market clearing rate, have on the Thai rice market. Who would stand to benefit from this program, and who would be hurt (Hint – use consumer and producer surplus to answer that)? How would your answer change if the supply of rice was elastic, vs. if it is elastic. A price floor set above the market clearing price would create a surplus of rice, with some growers not able to sell all of their rice. New growers will come into the market, creating an excess of rice., as consumers consume other foods. If the supply and demand for rice are both inelastic, then producers will mostly benefit, they still sell most of their rice, and not many new suppliers come into the market. Consumers are mostly hurt, they are not getting as much consumer surplus as before. If the supply and demand are elastic, then those few farmers who are still selling rice gain a bit, but most rice farmers are left with lots of rice they can’t sell. Consumers are hurt, but not much, most of them just switch to a good substitute. Graph out the supply and demand for low skill workers. Assume that the market clearing wage is 20 baht an hour (i.e. assume that low skill workers will get paid 20 baht an hour when the market set prices). If the minimum wage is 15 baht, what effect will this have on the quantity of low skilled workers working, and the wages they receive. What if the minimum wage is instead set to be 30 baht an hour? Then Page 2 of 6 D:\148087708.doc explain (and show) what the effects of a minimum wage set above the market clearing price will be. Under what conditions will workers benefit from a high minimum wage, and under what conditions will they suffer? Draw a supply and demand graph for the labor market, be sure to label it clearly. Then, assume that the Thai Government mandates that all Thai companies have to provide workers with free health care benefits. What will this do to wages, the quantity of workers employed, and the compensation of workers. Under what circumstances would this help workers, and under what circumstances would it hurt them. This question is a bit harder than the other ones. Will answer it later, it will take a while to draw a good graph of it. But basically, what will happen is demand for workers will shift in, since the price firms have to pay (wages + mandatory benefits) is now higher for any given worker. However, workers who receive the benefit will still have the same demand (assuming that they value 10,000 baht of healthcare the same as they value 10,000 – which is unlikely), so you will get a “tax wedge”, and more workers looking for work, and workers getting higher overall wages plus benefits, but their wages will almost certainly go down. Will give a fuller answer later. What are the assumptions about how people interact in a market, that makes many economists believe that markets lead to moral behavior. Why do economists assume this to be true, even if people are at heart selfish. Using the concept of consumer and producer surplus, explain why economists believe markets are a pretty good way to organize society I like beer, so much that I would buy the first can after work for 100 baht. I would pay 90 for the second can, 80 for the third, and 10 baht less for each successive can. This exhibits __Decreasing______________ returns, and means that demand slopes __Downwards________. If the price of beer is 40 baht a can, how much money should I spend on beer? I would purchase 6 or 7 beer, since I value them at 100 90 80 70 60 50 40. The sixth beer I would purchase for sure, since it gives a marginal benefit of 50 but costs me 40. The seventh beer gives a marginal benefit of 40, but it costs 40, so I could go either way. Thus I would SPEND 240 or 280 for beer. Since they come in six-packs, probably the 240…. Page 3 of 6 D:\148087708.doc Assume three types of productive technologies, illustrated below. Which one shows declining returns, increasing returns, and constant returns. Now below each one, show production possibility frontier for two goods that both shared the same productive technology would have. Be sure to label economically efficient, economically inefficient, and technologically impossible points. The relevant PPFs would look like…… Sorry, forgot to draw the points, but you should be able to figure that out yourselves, drawing graphs is time consuming. Caveman Ooog, and his cavewife Grrrr, have to decide about who will hunt, and who will gather. Ooog can catch 1 rabbits an hour, or gather 1 coconut in an hour day. Grrrr can catch 1 Rabbit every two hours, or gather 2 coconuts in an hour. Draw the production possibility frontier if they each hunt/gather for themselves, and then draw it if the cooperate and share. Who would specialize in what, and why. Is this an example of absolute, or comparative, advantage? Page 4 of 6 D:\148087708.doc Something like the right. Ooog has a 1:1 tradeoff between coconuts and rabbits, Grrrr trades them off at a 4:1 ratio. This is an example of absolute advantage, though it should be noted that both ALSO have a comparative advantage in the thing they have an absolute advantage in. Define the following Opportunity cost Path dependency The law of supply and demand Elasticity The production possibility frontier Comparative advantage Absolute advantage Tax Sales tax/VAT Income tax Progressive tax Property rights What are the three characteristics of them? Technological innovation TANSTAAFL The Law of Unintended consequences Positive Incentives Negative Incentives The Peltzman Effect Price Elasticity Cross-Price Elasticity Income Elasticity The Short Run and the Long Run Page 5 of 6 D:\148087708.doc Thick Markets Cartels (OPEC) Price Discrimination The law of diminish returns Declining, constant, increasing, returns. Economic profits Accounting profits Page 6 of 6 D:\148087708.doc