ECO2013 Chapter 1 Quiz
What is the area of the blue triangle shown in the figure to the right?
$6250
Trade-offs force society to make choices, particularly when answering the following three fundamental questions:
1. what goods and services will be produced? 2. how will the goods and services be produced? 3. who will receive the goods and services produced?
The pie chart to the right illustrates hypothetical data for the market share for the United States automobile market. The percentage of the U.S. market that U.S. auto firms control is
50%
When we graph the relationship between two variables, we often want to draw conclusions about whether changes in one variable are causing changes in the other variable. Doing so, however, can lead to incorrect conclusions. Reasons for drawing incorrect conclusions about cause and effect include
An omitted variable. Reverse Casualty. (BOTH A AND B)
Harry Fletcher is a market analyst at an automobile firm. He formed a hypothesis that an increase in advertising would increase demand for the firm's cars. The ad campaign ran for a period of six months. However, the results were not as positive as Harry had anticipated. Which of the following, if true, can explain this outcome?
Interest rates increased substantially during this period.
Economics is a social science because
It is based on studying the actions of individuals. It applies the scientific method to the study of the interactions among individuals. It considers human behavior—particularly decision-making behavior. (ALL OF THE ABOVE)
Microsoft charges a price of $599 for a copy of Windows 7. Is this pricing decision rational?
When we assume the managers at Microsoft have used all available information and have weighed all known benefits and costs, we are assuming rationality.
Microeconomics is the study of
how households and firms make choices, how they interact in markets, and how the government attempts to influence their choices
Equity is
the fair distribution of economic benefits
When the federal government crafts environmental policies that make it less expensive for firms to follow green initiatives,
the policies are consistent with economic incentives.