ch 8 practice quiz micro
Suppose a tax of $1 per unit is imposed on a good. The more elastic the demand for the good, other things equal, the larger is the decrease in quantity demanded as a result of the tax. the smaller is the tax burden on buyers relative to the tax burden on sellers. the larger is the deadweight loss of the tax. All of the above are correct.
all of the above
Deadweight loss measures the loss
in a market to buyers and sellers that is not offset by an increase in government revenue
examples of taxes on labor
medicare tax, federal income tax, social security tax
Taxes on labor encourage which of the following?
mothers to stay at home rather than work in the labor force
Suppose the government increases the size of a tax by 40 percent. The deadweight loss from that tax
increases by more than 40 percent
Assume the price of gasoline is $2.00 per gallon, and the equilibrium quantity of gasoline is 10 million gallons per day with no tax on gasoline. Starting from this initial situation, which of the following scenarios would result in the largest deadweight loss? The price elasticity of demand for gasoline is 0.1; the price elasticity of supply for gasoline is 0.6; and the gasoline tax amounts to $0.20 per gallon. The price elasticity of demand for gasoline is 0.1; the price elasticity of supply for gasoline is 0.4; and the gasoline tax amounts to $0.20 per gallon. The price elasticity of demand for gasoline is 0.2; the price elasticity of supply for gasoline is 0.6; and the gasoline tax amounts to $0.30 per gallon. There is insufficient information to make this determination.
The price elasticity of demand for gasoline is 0.2; the price elasticity of supply for gasoline is 0.6; and the gasoline tax amounts to $0.30 per gallon.
A tax placed on buyers of airline tickets shifts the
demand curve for airline tickets downward, decreasing the price received by sellers of airline tickets and causing the quantity of airline tickets to decrease.
When a tax is imposed on a good, the
equilibrium quantity of the good always decreases
When the government places a tax on a product, the cost of the tax to buyers and sellers
exceeds the revenue raised from the tax by the government.
Total surplus is always equal to the sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus.
false
For a good that is taxed, the area on the relevant supply-and-demand graph that represents government's tax revenue is
smaller than the area that represents the loss of consumer surplus and producer surplus caused by the tax.