Final Exam Study

Réussis tes devoirs et examens dès maintenant avec Quizwiz!

If a firm increases all of its inputs by 10 percent and it's output increases by 15 percent, the

It is encountering economies of scale

Allocative inefficiency due to unregulated monopoly is characterized by the condition:

P>MC

Cash expenditures a firm makes to pay for resources are called:

explicit costs

In an increasing cost industry is the result of

higher resource prices that occur as the industry expands

If a purely competitive firm is maximizing economic profit,

it may or may not be maximizing per-unit profit.

Many people believe that monopolies charge any price they want to without affecting sales. Instead, the output level for a profit-maximizing monopoly is determined by:

marginal cost = marginal revenue

An industry comprised of four firms, each with about 25 percent of the total market for a product, is an example of:

oligopoly

One feature of pure monopoly is that the firm is:

price maker

Price discrimination refers to

the selling of a given product at different prices that do not reflect cost differences.

Refer to the graph provided. There are diseconomies if scale

Beyond Q4

Implicit costs are:

"payments" for self-employed resources

For a purely competitive seller, price equals:

average revenue, marginal revenue, total revenue divided by output

If a regulatory commission wants to provide a natural monopoly with a fair return, it should establish a price that is equal to:

average total cost

average fixed cost

declines continually as output increases

As output increases, average fixed costs

decrease

A purely competitive seller has a

A constant horizontal graph where D = MR

At what price would the firm break even?

At the price equal to minimum ATC

The accompanying graph represents the purely competitive market for a product. When the market is at equilibrium, the total opportunity cost of producing the equilibrium output level would be represented by the area

C

A firm sells a product in a purely competitive market. The marginal cost of the product at the current output of 1,000 units is $2.50. The minimum possible average variable cost is $2.00. The market price of the product is $2.50. To maximize profit or minimize losses, the firm should:

Continue producing 1,000 units

Productive efficiency refers to:

Cost minimization, where P = minimum ATC

In moving down the elastic segment of the monopolist's demand curve, total revenue is:

Increasing and marginal revenue is positive

Resource costs increase in a purely competitive industry. This change will result in a(n):

Decrease in the short-run supply curve for a firm in the industry

All of the following statements apply to a purely competitive market in the, except

Total fixed costs remain constant even when output expands in the long run

In the standard model of pure competition in the short run, a profit-maximizing firm will produce the output quantity where the gap between

Total revenue and total cost is the largest, with revenue higher than cost

In the standard model of pure competition, a profit maximizing entrepreneur will close down in the short run if:

Total revenue is less than total variable costs

In graph with c a horizontal line and a a straight positive slopes line, curve a represents

Total revenue only

A purely competitive firm's short-run supply curve is;

Upsloping and equal to the portion of the marginal cost curve that lies above the average variable cost curve

In a purely competitive industry, the output quantity would be

Where MC = (AR = D)

In the short run, a purely competitive firm that seeks to maximize profit will produce:

where total revenue exceeds total cost by the maximum amount.

When a firm doubles its inputs and finds that its output has more than doubled, this is known as:

economies of scale

The long-run supply curve in a constant-cost industry would be:

horizontal

A constant-cost industry is one in which:

if 100 units can be produced for $100, then 150 can be produced for $150, 200 for $200, and so forth.

example of price discrimination

A major airline sells tickets to a senior citizens at lower prices than to other passengers

Because the marginal product of a variable resource at first increases and then decreases as the output of the firm is increased: A. total cost at first increases at a decreasing rate and then increases at an increasing rate. B. total variable cost at first increases at an increasing rate and then increases at a decreasing rate. C. average total cost at first increases and then diminishes. D. average fixed cost will rise beyond the point of diminishing returns.

A. total cost at first increases at a decreasing rate and then increases at an increasing rate.

A monopoly results in productive inefficiency because at the profit-maximizing output level

ATC is not at its minimum level

Refer to the graph. Which one of the following would cause a move from point b ton the short-run average total cost curve ATC1 to point e on short-run average cost curve ATC2? (1 is below 2 but identical)

An increase in wage

X-inefficiency is said to occur when a firm's

Average costs of producing any output are greater than the minimum possible average costs

Total fixed cost is

Average fixed cost at 1 unit of output

Assume a firm is operating at minimum average total cost in the short run. If there is a decrease in output it follows that:

Average fixed cost increases

Refer to the short-run production and cost data. In figure A curve 1 is

Average product and curve 2 is marginal product. Both are concave down. 2 is steeper and goes up higher

At output level H in the provided graph, the area

BCGH represents the firm's total fixed cost of production. Distance from AVC to ATC

If market price is $1.05, then the firm will produce

Between 15 and 20 units in the short run

Price is taken to be a "given" by an individual firm selling in a purely competitive market because:

Each seller supplies a negligible fraction of total market

Imperfectly competitive producers

Face down sloping demand curves, can alter their output by changing price, find that when they reduce price their total revenue increases by less that the new price

If a monopolist produces 100 units of output at a market price of $5 per unit with marginal revenue per unit equaling $4, we would expect that if the monopolist's good was provided under pure competition, quantity would be:

Higher than 100 units, price lower than $5, and MR = price

An industry where a change in the number of firms does not affect the prices of the resources used in the industry will have a long-run supply curve that is

Horizontal

Many economists agree that government should deal with monopolists on a case by case basis. Which of the following is not a government policy option?

If the monopoly is maximizing economic profits, the government can subsidize new firms to enter the industry

Which of the following statements about a competitive firm is correct?

In long-run equilibrium a competitive firm will produce at the point of minimum average costs

A purely competitive firm is producing at the point where it's marginal cost equals the price of its product. If the firm increases its output, then total revenue will

Increase and profits will decrease

The wage rate increases in a purely competitive industry. This change will result in a(n):

Increase in the marginal cost curve for a firm in the industry

Suppose that a monopolist calculates that at present output and sales levels, marginal revenue is $1 and marginal cost is $2. He could maximize profits or minimize losses by:

Increasing price and decreasing output

The long run ATC for a purely competitive firm that is producing at an equilibrium level of output, the firm's economic profit

Is zero

A purely competitive firm does not try to sell more of its product by lowering its price below the market price because

It can sell all it wants to at the market price

If a pure monopolist is producing at that output where MR = MC output

It will be in the interest of the firm, but not necessarily of society, to reduce output

The following statement about the "sunk cost fallacy" is true

It's the tendency to drag past costs into current marginal cost-benefit calculations, it comes from a desire to "get one's money's worth" out of a past expenditure, and it could lead one to "throw good money after bad"

The theory of creative destruction was advanced many years ago by:

Joseph Schumpeter

Round Things, Inc.'s production process exhibits economies of scale. Currently their long-run average cost is $1/unit. If Round Things doubles its use of all inputs, its new long-run average total cost will be:

Less than $1/unit

If the price of labor or some other variable resource decreased, the:

MC curve would shift downward

In the short run, the individual competitive firm's supply curve is that segment of the:

Marginal cost curve lying above the average variable cost curve

Refer to the diagram. If labor is the only variable input, the marginal product of labor is a

Maximum at point a. The lowest point on MC curve

In the short run, a firm is willing to produce at a price point where

Only AVC are being paid off

When a purely competitive firm is in long-run equilibrium:

Price and average total cost are equal

An economy is producing at the least-cost rate of production when:

Price and minimum average total cost are equal

An industry is producing at the least-cost rate of production when

Price and the minimum average cost are equal

The Ajax Manufacturing Company is selling in a purely competitive market. It's output is 100 units, which sell at $4 each. At this level of output, total cost is $600, total foxed cost is $100, and marginal cost is $4. The firm should

Produce zero units of output

The vertical distance between the horizontal axis and any point on a non-discriminating monopolist's demand curve measures

Product price and average revenue

In the short run, purely competitive firms earn ____ in equilibrium while in the long run firms earn ____ in equilibrium, respectively.

Profits or losses; normal profit

In the diagram, the range of diminishing marginal returns is

Q1Q3. Top of marginal product curve to when marginal product is zero

In the inelastic portion of a monopolist's demand curve, an increase in price will

Reduce output quantity, increase total revenue, and decrease total cost.

If the price of product Y is $25 and it's marginal cost is $18

Resources are under allocated to Y

creative destruction

Stimulates growth, contributes to the production of new goods, and forces firms to be innovative

Suppose that the corn market is purely competitive. If the corn farmers are currently earning negative economic profits, then we would expect that in the long run the market's

Supply curve will shift to the left

If a regulatory commission imposed upon a non discriminating natural monopoly a price that is equal to marginal cost and below average total cost at the resulting output, then

The firm must be subsidized or it will go bankrupt

Which of the following is true for a purely competitive firm in short run equilibrium?

The firm's marginal revenue is equal to its marginal cost

Under what conditions would an increase in demand lead to a lower long-run equilibrium price?

The firms in the market are part of a decreasing-cost industry.

A firm doubles the quantity of all resources it employs and, as a result, output doubles. Which of the following is correct?

The long-run average total cost curve is flat

Refer to the provided graph showing the marginal product and the average product of labor. At which quantity of labor employed is marginal product equal to average product?

When they intersect

Assume a purely competitive constant-cost industry is initially at long-run equilibrium. Now suppose that a decrease in demand occurs. After all the long-run adjustments have been completed, the new equilibrium price

Will be the same as the initial price, and the output will be less

Which of the following is not a barrier to entry?

X-inefficiency

The law of diminishing returns results in

a total product curve that eventually increases at a decreasing rate.

If marginal cost exceeds average total cost in the short run, then which is likely to be true?

average total cost is increasing.

In a typical graph for a purely competitive firm, the intersection of the total cost and total revenue curves would be:

break-even point

In the short run, output:

can vary as the result of using a fixed amount of plant and equipment more or less intensively

The long-run equilibrium of a purely competitive industry ensures:

consumer and producer surplus is maximized

The process by which new firms and new products replace existing dominant firms and products is called

creative destruction

The main difference between the short run and the long run is that:

in the short run, one or more inputs are fixed

A pure monopolist should never produce in the

inelastic segment of its demand curve because it can increase total revenue and reduce total cost by increasing price.

For a purely competitive firm, total revenue:

is price times quantity sold, increases by a constant absolute amount as output expands, and graphs as a straight upsloping line from the origin

Costs to an economist:

may or may not involve monetary outlays

If a purely competitive firm is producing at the MR = MC output level and earning an economic profit, then:

new firms will enter this market.

If a profit-seeking competitive firm is producing its profit-maximizing output and its total fixed costs fall by 25 percent, the firm should:

not change its output

When a purely competitive firm is in long-run equilibrium:

price equals marginal cost

Resources are efficiently allocated when production occurs where:

price is equal to marginal cost

Other things equal, a price discriminating monopolist will

produce a larger output than a nondiscriminating monopolist.

Which of the following is most likely to be a fixed cost?

property insurance premiums

Suppose a firm in a purely competitive market discovers that the price of its product is above its minimum AVC point but everywhere below ATC. Given this, the firm:

should continue producing in the short run but leave the industry in the long run if the situation persists.

If at the MC = MR output, AVC exceeds price:

some firms should shut down in the short run

In comparing the changes in TVC and TC associated with an additional unit of output, we find that:

the changes in TC and TVC are equal

If a purely competitive firm is producing where price exceeds marginal cost, then

the firm will fail to maximize profit and resources will be underallocated to the product.

When diseconomies of scale occur:

the long-run average total cost curve rises.

Economists use the term imperfect competition to describe

those markets that are not purely competitive.

The average total cost is equal to

total cost/output

A firm reaches a break-even point (normal profit position) where:

total revenue and total cost are equal

Economies and diseconomies of scale explain

why the firm's long-run average total cost curve is U-shaped.

If you know that when a firm produces 10 units of output, total costs are $1,030 and average fixed costs are $10, then total fixed costs are:

$100


Ensembles d'études connexes

Accounting 201 - Chapter 12 Quiz

View Set

Chapter 19: Workforce Engagement and Collective Action

View Set

BUS 101 - Module 4: Operating Systems and File Management

View Set

Level I Antiterrorism Awareness Training

View Set