Economics

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Sales taxes are proportional in relation to income because the same tax rate applies regardless of the size of the purchase

False

Supply refers to the amount of a product that a producer will offer in the market at some particular price

False

Surpluses drive the market up; Shortages drive the market down

False

Technological progress in the health care industry has typically reduced costs and increased supply

False

The benefits-received principle of taxation is used to support corporate and personal income taxes

False

The benefits-received principle of taxation supports the case for highly progressive taxation

False

The closer the Lorenz curve is to the diagonal, the greater is the degree if income inequality

False

The demand curve for a purely competitive industry is perfectly elastic, but the demand curves faced by individual firms in such an industry are downsloping

False

The law of diminishing returns explains diseconomies of scale

False

The law of diminishing returns explains why the long-run average total cost curve is U-shaped

False

The monopolistically competitive seller maximizes profits by equating price and marginal cost

False

The optimal (economically-effiecient) level of air pollution is zero emissions

False

The regulation of natural monopolies has been criticized because it creates a tendency for regulated firms to use too much labor and too little capital in the production process

False

The short run is a period of time during which all costs are fixed costs

False

The smaller the number of good substitutes for a product, the greater will be the price elasticity of demand for it

False

The supply of loanable funds is perfectly elastic

False

The top 20 percent of U.S. income earners receive nearly 80 percent of total U.S. income.

False

Toothbrushes and toothpaste are substitute goods

False

The economic profits earned by monopolistically competitive sellers are zero in the long run

True

The law of diminishing returns explains why short-run marginal cost curves are upward sloping

True

The marginal revenue product curve of a purely competitive seller declines solely because of the law of diminishing returns

True

The real opportunity cost of producing product X is the amounts of product Y,Z, and so forth, that might have been produced if resources had nit been used to produce X

True

The total revenue curve of a competitive seller graphs as a straight, up sloping line

True

Variable costs are costs that vary directly with output

True

Although sleeping in on a work day or school day has an opportunity cost, sleeping in on weekends does not

False

An economic model is an ideal or utopian type of economy that society should strive to obtain through economic policy

False

An economy cannot produce at a point outside of its PPC because human economic wants are insatiable

False

An increase in quantity supplied might be caused by an increase in production costs

False

Because economic generalizations are simplifications from reality, they are impractical and useless.

False

Because of the ability to influence price, a pure monopolist can increase price and increase volume of sales simultaneously

False

Because of their large-scale level of production, pure monopolists over allocate resources to their industry by producing beyond the P=MC output

False

Certain inherently desirable products such as education and health care should be produced so long as resources are available

False

Economic profit is found by subtracting accounting costs from total revenue

False

Elasticity of a resource demand is measured by dividing "percentage change in resource price" by "percentage change in resource quantity"

False

The demand for a resources depends on its productivity and the market value of the product that it is producing

True

In the long run, monopolistically competitive firms make normal profits because they are forced to operate at the minimum point on their avg total cost curve

False

In the short run, a pure monopolist will charge the highest price the market will bear for its product

False

If market demand increases and market supply decreases, the change in equilibrium price is unpredictable without first knowing the exact magnitudes of the demand and supply changes

False

In a purely competitive industry competition centers more on advertising and sales promotion than on price

False

In maximizing profit, a firm will always produce that output where total revenues are at a maximum

False

In the long run, a pure monopolist must produce at that output where average total cost is at a minimum

False

Labor market discrimination increases the size of the nations Gross Domestic Product

False

Majority voting assures that government will provide a public good if it yields total benefits in excess of total costs

False

Normative statements are expressions of facts

False

Positive statements are expressions of value judgements

False

Price discrimination is illegal in the United States under antitrust regulations

False

Price discrimination occurs every time a firm sells a good for two different prices

False

Pure monopolists always earn economic profits

False

A ceiling price in a competitive market will result in persistent surpluses of a product

False

A competitive firm will produce in the short run so long as its price exceeds its average fixed cost

False

A decrease in supply of X increases the equilibrium price of X, which reduces the demand for X and automatically returns the price of X to its initial level

False

A price floor in a competitive market will result in persistent shortage of a product

False

Although individual purely competitive firms can influence the price of their product, these firms as a group cannot influence market price

False

The demand curve of a monopolistically competitive producer is less elastic than that of a purely competitive producer

True

A government subsidy per unit of output increases supply

True

A government tax per unit of output reduces supply

True

A highly progressive tax takes relatively more from the rich than it does from the poor

True

A monopolistic employer may sell its product in a competitive market

True

After all long-run adjustments have been completed, a firm in a competitive industry will produce that level of output where average total cost is at a minimum

True

An improvement in the technology of pollution control is likely to increase societies optimal amount of pollution abatement

True

An increase in demand accompanied by an increase in supply will increase the equilibrium quantity but the effect on equilibrium price will be indeterminate

True

At zero units of output a firm's variable costs are zero

True

Average fixed costs diminish continuously as output increases

True

Because the equilibrium position of a purely competitive seller entails an equality of price and marginal costs, competition produces up to an efficient allocation of economic resources

True

Choices entail marginal costs because resources are scarce

True

Consumers buy more of a normal good as their incomes rise

True

Cost-benefit analysis is frequently difficult to apply because it is difficult to quantify the full benefits of a public good or service

True

Critics of the minimum wage contend that higher minimums cause employers to move up their labor demand curves, reducing employment of low-wage workers

True

Demand is the active and supply is the passive determinant of land rent

True

Diseconomies of scale stem primarily from the difficulties in managing and coordinating a large-scale business enterprise

True

Generally speaking, the demand for luxury goods is more elastic than demand for necessities

True

Generally speaking, the larger the number of firms in an oligopolistic industry, the more difficult it is for those firms to collude

True

Human capital investment refers to spending on education and worker training

True

If demand increases and supply simultaneously decreases, equilibrium price will rise

True

If price and total revenue are directly related, demand is elastic

True

If price changes and total revenue changes in the opposite direction, demand is relatively elastic.

True

If the XYZ company can sell 4 units per week at $10 per unit and 5 units per week at $9 per unit, the marginal revenue of the fifth unit is $5

True

If the demand for wheat is highly price inelastic, an extraordinarily large crop mat reduce farm incomes

True

If three or four homogeneous oligopolists collude, the resulting price and production outcomes will be similar to those of a pure monopoly

True

If you pay a $1000 tax on $10,000 of taxable income and a $3000 tax on a taxable income of $16,000, the tax is progressive

True

It will be profitable for a firm to hire additional units of any resource up to the point at which it MRP is equal to is MRC

True

Marginal analysis means that decision makers compare the extra benefits with the extra costs of a specific choice

True

Marginal cost is a measure of the alternative goods which society forgoes in using resources to produce an additional unit of some specific product

True

Marginal revenue is the addition to total revenue resulting from the sale of one more unit of output

True

Price and marginal revenue are identical for an individual purely competitive market

True

Products and services are scarce because resources are scarce

True

Rational individuals may make different choices because their preferences and circumstances differ

True

Taxes and/or mandatory fees can solve the free rider problem

True

The PPC shows various combinations of two products that an economy can produce when achieving full employment

True

The U.S. poverty rate was considerably lower in 2004 than in 1960

True


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