ECON 323 EXAM 2 HW & LC
Lee has just started a lobster farm in a perfectly competitive market; it costs him $12 per pound to produce medium-sized lobsters. He knows that the farms nearby can produce lobsters at lower costs, $9 to $10 per pound. The market price for lobster in his area is $11 per pound. How much should Lee sell his lobster for assuming he already produced them?
11
If a firm has constant returns to scale and it doubles both capital and labor, by what factor should the firm's output change?
2
Demand is QD = 5,000 − 4P and supply is given by QS = 7P − 500. The equilibrium price is 500 and quantity is
3000
if a firm has decreasing returns to scale and it triples both capital and labor, by what factor might the firm see its output change?
<3.0
The correct equation for the price elasticity of demand is:
E^D = %ΔQ^D/%Δ^P
A company can produce two products disjointly or jointly. If the company produces the products disjointly, the cost function for the first product is C1(Q1) = 2Q12. The cost function for the second product produced disjointly is C2(Q2) = 4Q22. If the company produces the two products jointly, the cost function is C(Q1,Q2) = 2Q12 + 4Q22 - Q1Q2. Which of the following statements is correct?
Economies of scope exist for the company. The company can produce more cheaply jointly than producing the products disjointly.
Fleet Foot's average fixed cost is $25 and fixed cost represents 25% of Fleet Foot's total cost of $150,000. Which of the following statements is true?
Fleet Foot produced output of Q = 1,500
what is true about average total cost?
It is the sum of average variable cost and average fixed cost. It is not strictly decreasing as output rises. It is equal to (FC + VC) / Q.
for perfect complements, the curves are
L shaped right angles
Which of these is TRUE regarding producer surplus and profit?
Producer surplus includes no fixed costs, while profit does
Producer surplus in mathematical terms is PS =
TR - VC
Suppose the following is true for a firm in a perfectly competitive industry: P = 25, MC = 30, and AVCmin = 20. Which of the following statements is true?
The firm needs to decrease production in the short run to maximize profits
Average fixed cost
a firm's fixed cost per unit of output
A company produces a flying car; however, it is so expensive that no one is willing to buy it. The price they are charging is:
a price greater than or equal to the demand choke price
Many states require beauticians to be licensed before they can begin working with the public. This means that haircut services
are not; there are barriers to entry
marginal cost is greater than average variable cost when
average variable cost is increasing
specific capital
capital that cannot be used outside of its original application
increasing returns to scale
changing all inputs by the same proportion changes output more than proportionately
at higher output levels, marginal cost is above average total cost, causing total cost to rise more quickly than outputs does. Here, there are
diseconomies of scale
producer surplus for an industry
entire industries' surplus from producing units at a lower cost than the market price
Apples and Opals Boutique has stocked a large number of feather fans. Very few of the fans sell. This is an example of:
excess supply
increasing returns cannot be cause by
expansion paths
average fixed cost is the number of units of output per dollar of the firm's fixed cost
false
average fixed cost
firm's fixed cost per unit of output
the firm's cost-minimization problem is:
firm's goal of producing a specific quantity of output at minimum cost
average total cost
firm's total cost per unit of output
average variable cost
firm's variable cost per unit of output
the presence of capital rental and resale markets make costs less likely to be fixed, meaning more...
flexibility of input levels
In the short run, a firm should operate as long as its total revenue is:
greater than or equal to its variable cost
For a perfectly competitive firm, if output increases by 1 unit, total revenue:
increases by the market price
when a firm wants to increase its output quantity in the short run, it can do so by
increasing quantity of labor used
fixed cost
input cost that doesn't vary w/the amount of output quantity, even if that quantity is zero
what doesn't influence demand in product markets?
input prices
Because of what we know about the demand curve, the price elasticity of demand:
is always negative.
the price elasticity of supply:
is always positive
Cell phones have become nearly ubiquitous around the world, with sales of around 1.5 billion units per year. The cell phone industry
is not in a perfectly competitive market, in part because there are a small number of providers
curve that shows all the input combinations that yield the same cost is called a
isocost line
a curve representing all the combinations of inputs that allow a firm to make a particular quantity of output is called a
isoquant
Which of these is NOT true about the average total cost?
it rises and then falls as output rises
what is not true about a supply curve
it shows the relationship between the quantity demanded of a good and the price of the good
Chandi has just opened a bakery. In her first week of business, her firm produced 30 cakes. In her second week of business, the firm again produced 30 cakes, but Chandi noticed that less of each ingredient, such as flour and eggs, was consumed to produce the cakes. Chandi suspects this is because as the workers have gotten accustomed to their working environment, less of any ingredients have been wasted. This is an example of:
learning by doing
increasing returns to scale can be caused by
learning by doing, fixed costs, and any production process involving containers whose volume (output) increases faster than the surface area (input)
if inputs are perfect substitutes, the MRTS doesn't change at all with the amounts of the inputs used, and the isoquants are perfect
lines
The difference between the firm's total revenue and its total cost is largest when the firm produces the quantity of output at which:
marginal cost equals the market price.
In a perfectly competitive market, a firm will maximize profits by choosing a quantity of production where the
marginal cost is equal to the market price
In a perfectly competitive market, a firm will maximize profits by choosing a quantity of production where the marginal cost of production is equal to the:
market price
In a perfectly competitive market where firms have different costs, the long-run market price is equal to the
minimum average cost of the highest-cost firm in the industry
The slope of an isocost line is the:
negative ratio of the input prices.
Sophia decides to enter the perfectly competitive olive oil market where current market prices are $2.89/pint. Hoping to recover her start-up costs quickly, she decides to charge $3.19/pint for "Sophia's Select" olive oil. This decision will have
no effect on market prices, and Sophia will not sell any
In a perfectly competitive market, when the market price is less than the marginal cost, the firm should:
not make an extra unit of output.
Market equilibrium
occurs at the price that makes quantity supplied equal to quantity demanded
Producer surplus can be calculated by finding the area of the rectangle with width equal to production output and height equal to the difference between the price and average variable cost or by finding the area between the:
price line and marginal cost curve.
Producer surplus can be calculated by finding the area of the rectangle with a width equal to
production output and height is equal to the difference between price and AVC
economic rent
returns to specialized inputs above what firms paid for them.
for perfect substitutes, isoquants are
straight lines
The cross-price elasticity of demand between good A and good B is +2.5. That means A and B are:
substitutes
To economists, "search costs" are:
the costs incurred by buyers and sellers as they attempt to find each other
form of total factor productivity growth?
the development of a new machine that does a task at twice the speed of a worker
profit
the difference between a firm's revenue and its total cost.
an assumption of production theory is that if there is a well-functioning capital market...
the firm doesn't have a budget constraint
which is not an assumption of production theory?
the firm maximizes profits
Priya owns a turkey farm that is growing larger each year. Her industry is a perfectly competitive market, which means she will charge
the market price
Perfectly competitive markets are:
the most efficient markets
perfectly competitive firms will be able to decide
the quantity of output they produce
economies of scope
the simultaneous production of multiple products at a lower cost than if a firm made each product separately.
economies of scale exist when
total cost rises at a slower rate than output rises
constant economies of scale exist when
total cost rises at the same rate as output rises.
Economic rent is returns to specialized inputs above what firms paid for them
true
The inverse demand curve for M&B chardonnay (wine) is P = 200 − 0.1QD. When quantity demanded is 1,000, demand is said to be:
unit elastic (unique point where E=-1)