econ 211 exam 1
Principle 1: People Face Trade-offs
To get something that we like, we have to give up something else that we also like
in a competitive market, the quantity of a product produced and the price of the product are determined by
both buyers and sellers
how can absolute advantage be determined?
by comparing different producers input requirements per unit of output
what are gains from specialization and trade based on?
comparative advantage
what represents specialization and its relationship with trade?
comparative advantage
An increase in the price of a good will
decrease demand
If the number of buyers in a market decreases, then
demand will decrease
true or false: David Ricardos greatest contribution in his theory on free trade, was based on absolute advantage
false
true or false: If one producer has the absolute advantage in the production of all goods, then that same producer will have the comparative advantage in the production of all goods as well.
false
true or false: When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward, the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other is constant
false
true or false: points outside the production possibilities frontier represent feasible levels of production
false
A decrease in the price of a good will
give producers an incentive to produce less
Prices act as signals in the markets. if the price of a good increases due to an increase in demand, this is a signal to producers to
increase production
when the price of a good decreases, buyers purchase more of the good
law of demand
If Max experiences a decrease in his income, then we would expect Max's demand for
normal goods to decrease
Principal 5: Trade can make everyone better off
people can buy a greater variety of goods and services at a lower cost
equality
prosperity is distributed uniformly among society's members
An increase in quantity supplied
results in a movement upward and to the right along a fixed supply curve
when quantity demanded decreases at every possible price, the demand curve has
shifted to the left
Principle 3: Rational People Think at the Margin
small incremental adjustments to a plan of action
Efficiency
society gets the most from its scarce resources
Principle 4: People Respond to Incentives
something that induces a person to act
You go to the movieplex where movies ordinarily cost $9. You are intending to see a movie for which you have a $3 off coupon good for only that movie at that time. However, when you get there you see a friend who asks if you would rather see a new release. Both movies start and end at the same time. If you decide to see the new release with your friend, what is your opportunity cost?
the amount you value the first movie + $3
today's supply curve for ipods could shift in response to a change in
the expected future price of ipods
Scarcity
the limited nature of society's resources
a rational decision maker takes action if and only if
the marginal benefit of the action exceeds the marginal cost
What is not a determinant of demand?
the price of a resource that is used to produce the good
Economics
the study of how society manages its scarce resources in the most efficient way possible
when the price of a good or service changes,
there is a movement along a given supply curve
true or false: points inside the production possibles frontier represent feasible levels of production?
true
true or false: when a production possibles frontier is a straight line, the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other is constant
true
Principle 2: Opportunity Cost
whatever must be given up to obtain some item $