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Homework #5 Name: _____________________________ Economics/E. Napp Date: _____________________________ This Week’s Glossary: 1- The Law of Supply The law of supply is the tendency of suppliers to offer more of a good at higher prices. Conversely, suppliers will offer less of a good at lower prices. A supply schedule is a chart that lists how much of a good or service a supplier will offer at different prices. 2- Subsidy A subsidy is a government payment that supports a business or market. Subsidies are designed to protect domestic industries; to protect young and growing businesses; and to protect domestic industries in case imports are ever cut off. Subsidies shift the supply curve to the right. 3- Excise Tax An excise tax is a tax on the production or sale of a good or service. A government can reduce the supply of a good by placing an excise tax on it. Generally, excise taxes are placed on harmful items such as cigarettes. Excise taxes shift the supply curve to the left. They reduce supply. Multiple-Choice Questions: 1. What is the tendency of suppliers to offer more of a good at a higher price? (1) quantity supplied (2) supply (3) law of supply (4) Elasticity of supply 2. What factor might lead to the opening of several new pizzerias in a town? (1) The price of a slice of pizza has gone up. (2) The price of a slice of pizza has gone down. (3) The supply of pizza is inelastic. (4) The cost of producing pizza has doubled. 3. The measure of the way quantity supplied reacts to a change in price is (1) Quantity supplied. (2) Supply. (3) Consumer demand. (4) Elasticity of supply. 4. A raise in the price of a product (1) Causes firms to decrease production. (2) Causes a decrease in supply. (3) Increases competition. (4) Decreases competition. 5. Any factor that can change is (1) Supply. (2) A variable. (3) A supply curve. (4) A supply schedule. 6. A cost that rises or falls depending on how much is produced is a(n) (1) Fixed cost. (2) Variable cost. (3) Operating cost. (4) Labor cost 7. A cost that does not change, no matter how much of a good is produced is a(n) (1) Fixed cost. (2) Variable cost. (3) Operating cost. (4) Marginal cost. 8. How does a firm calculate its profit? (1) Marginal revenue minus marginal cost (2) Total revenue minus total cost (3) Variable cost plus total cost (4) Total revenue minus marginal revenue 9. The cost of producing one more unit of a good is known as a(n) (1) Fixed cost. (2) Variable cost. (3) Operating cost. (4) Marginal cost. 10. If the total cost of producing 300 leather jackets is $400 and the total cost of producing 301 leather jackets is $435, what is the marginal cost of production at 300 leather jackets? (1) $835 (2) $435 (3) $400 (4) $35 11. A government payment that supports a business or market is (1) Quantity supplied. (2) A regulation. (3) An excise tax. (4) A subsidy. 12. A tax on the production or sale of a good is called (1) Income tax. (2) A revenue tax. (3) An excise tax. (4) A subsidy. 13. What happens to supply when input costs go up? (1) It decreases because the good becomes more expensive to produce. (2) It increases because the good becomes cheaper to produce. (3) It increases because the good becomes more expensive to produce. (4) It decreases because consumers find a substitute product. 14. Government intervention in a market that affects the production of a good is (1) Regulation. (2) An excise tax. (3) Quantity supplied. (4) An input cost. 15. Which of the following will always cause a supply curve to shift to the left? (1) advances in technology (2) future expectations of falling prices (3) excise taxes (4) fewer inputs A quote to consider: “What most of these doomsday scenarios have gotten wrong is the fundamental idea of economics: people respond to incentives. If the price of a good goes up, people demand less of it, the companies that make it figure out how to make more of it, and everyone tries to figure out how to produce substitutes for it. Add to that the march of technological innovation (like the green revolution, birth control, etc.). The end result: markets figure out how to deal with problems of supply and demand.” ~ Steven D. Levitt Questions: 1- What is the law of supply? 2- Why do rising prices encourage competition? 3- How do government subsidies affect supply? 4- How do excise taxes impact supply? 5- What is the difference between a fixed cost and a variable cost? 6- What is a marginal cost? 7- Why do governments sometimes regulate markets? Analyzing Cartoons: 1- Explain the economic meaning of the following cartoon. 2- Explain the economic meaning of the following cartoon.