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On the labor markets, taxes may distort labor markets greatly if

the number of hours many part-time workers want to work is very sensitive to the wage rate.

A tax on a good has a deadweight loss if

the reduction in consumer and producer surplus is greater than the tax revenue.

The reduction of a tax

could increase tax revenue if the tax had been extremely high.

The Laffer curve illustrates that, in some circumstances, the government can reduce a tax on a good and increase the

government's tax revenue.

Deadweight loss measures the decrease in total surplus that results from a tariff or quota. Correct!

true

Suppose the supply of diamonds is relatively inelastic. A tax on diamonds would generate a

small deadweight loss and the burden of the tax would fall on the seller of diamonds.

According to the principle of comparative advantage, all countries can benefit from trading with one another because trade allows each country to specialize in doing what it does best.

true

Efficiency is related to the size of the economic pie, whereas equality is related to how the pie gets sliced and distributed.

true

Donna runs an inn and charges $300 a night for a room, which equals her cost. Sam, Harry, and Bill are three potential customers willing to pay $500, $325, and $250, respectively. When the government levies a tax on innkeepers of $50 per night of occupancy, Donna raises her price to $350. The deadweight loss of the tax is Correct! $25

25$

Diego, Emi, and Finn are available to work as tutors for the semester. The opportunity cost of tutoring is $100 for Diego, $200 for Emi, and $400 for Finn. The university is hiring tutors at a price of $300. Producer surplus equals

300$

Economists agree that trade ought to be restricted if free trade means that domestic jobs might be lost because of foreign competition.

false

If a country is exporting a good, this is because the country has an absolute advantage in the production of that good.

false

If the world price of a good is greater than the domestic price in a country that can engage in international trade, then that country becomes an importer of that good.

false

Total surplus in a market can be measured as the area below the supply curve plus the area above the demand curve, up to the point of equilibrium.

false

​Imposing a quota on the import of a good is preferable to a tariff because a tariff creates a deadweight loss while a quota does not.

false

An example of positive analysis is studying

how market forces produce equilibrium.

If Belgium exports chocolate to the rest of the world, then Belgian chocolate producers benefit from higher producer surplus, Belgian chocolate consumers are worse off because of lower consumer surplus, and total surplus in Belgium increases because of the exports of chocolate.

true

If a tariff is placed on watches, the price of both domestic and imported watches will rise by the amount of the tariff.

true

Import quotas and tariffs make domestic sellers better off and domestic buyers worse off.

true

In order to calculate consumer surplus in a market, we need to know willingness to pay and price.

true

In order to conclude that markets are efficient, we assume that they are perfectly competitive.

true

Policymakers often consider trade restrictions in order to protect domestic producers from foreign competitors.

true

When markets fail, public policy can potentially remedy the problem and increase economic efficiency.

true

Alexis, Bruno, and Camila each want an ice-cream cone. Alexis is willing to pay $12, Bruno is willing to pay $8, and Camila is willing to pay $4. The market price is $6. Consumer surplus equals

$8

Allen tutors in his spare time for extra income. Buyers of his service are willing to pay $40 per hour for as many hours Allen is willing to tutor. On a particular day, he is willing to tutor the first hour for $10, the second hour for $18, the third hour for $28, and the fourth hour for $40. Assume Allen is rational in deciding how many hours to tutor. His producer surplus is

64$

Price (Dollars perunit) Quantity Demanded (Units) Quantity Supplied (Units) 12.00 0 36 10.00 3 30 8.00 6 24 6.00 9 18 4.00 12 12 2.00 15 6 0.00 18 0 Refer to the Table above. Both the demand curve and the supply curve are straight lines. At equilibrium, total surplus is

72

Which of the following statements about a tariff is true?

A tariff increases producer surplus, decreases consumer surplus, increases revenue to the government, and reduces total surplus.

Taxes on labor income tend to encourage

All of the answer choices are correct.

When the nation of Ectenia opens itself to world trade in coffee beans, the domestic price of coffee beans falls. Which of the following describes the situation? Correct!

Domestic production of coffee falls, and Ectenia becomes a coffee importer.

The distinction between efficiency and equality can be described as follows:

Efficiency refers to maximizing the size of the pie; equality refers to distributing the pie fairly among members of society.

Which of the following is not employed as an argument in support of trade restrictions?

Free trade harms both domestic producers and domestic consumers and therefore reduces total surplus.

Suppose Japan exports cars to Russia and imports wine from France. This situation suggests

Japan has a comparative advantage relative to Russia in producing cars, and France has a comparative advantage relative to Japan in producing wine.

The graph that shows the relationship between the size of a tax and the tax revenue collected by the government is known as a

Laffer curve.

If a buyer's willingness to pay for a new Honda is $30,000 and she is able to actually buy it for $27,000, her consumer surplus is

None of the answer choices are correct.

Which of the following scenarios is consistent with the Laffer curve?

None of the answer choices are correct.

When a country allows trade and becomes an exporter of a good, which of the following is not a consequence?

The losses of domestic consumers of the good exceed the gains of domestic producers of the good.

What happens to the total surplus in a market when the government imposes a tax?

Total surplus decreases.

Which of the following would likely cause the greatest deadweight loss?

a tax on jewelry

Suppose there are three identical vases available to be purchased. Buyer 1 is willing to pay $30 for one, buyer 2 is willing to pay $25 for one, andbuyer 3 is willing to pay $20 for one. If the price is $25, how many vases will be sold and what is the value of consumer surplus in this market?

Two vases will be sold, and consumer surplus is $5.

Assume, for Vietnam, that the domestic price of textiles without international trade is lower than the world price of textiles. This suggests that, in the production of textiles, Correct!

Vietnam has a comparative advantage over other countries and Vietnam will export textiles.

Graph (a) on the left and Graph (b) on the right, each illustrates a $4 tax placed on a market. In comparison to Graph (a), Graph (b) illustrates which of the following statements? Correct!

When demand is relatively inelastic, the deadweight loss of a tax is smaller than when demand is relatively elastic.

If the world price for a good exceeds the before-trade domestic price for a good, then that country must have

a comparative advantage in the production of the good.

If free trade is allowed, a country will export a good if the world price is

above the before-trade domestic price of the good.

Producer surplus is the area

above the supply curve and below the price.

If a market generates a side effect or externality, then free market solutions

are inefficient.

If a producer has market power (can influence the price of the product in the market) then free market solutions

are inefficient.

Consumer surplus is the area

below the demand curve and above the price.

Total surplus is the area

below the demand curve and above the supply curve.

Gavin has been working full-time as a gardener for $300 a week. When the market price of gardeners rises to $400, Hector becomes a gardener as well. How much does producer surplus rise as a result of this price increase?

between $100 and $200

A tax on gasoline is likely to

cause a greater deadweight loss in the long run when compared to the short run.

When a tax distorts incentives to buyers and sellers so that fewer goods are produced and sold, the tax has

caused a deadweight loss.

To fully understand how taxes affect economic well-being, we must

compare the reduced welfare of buyers and sellers to the amount of revenue the government raises.

An efficient allocation of resources maximizes

consumer surplus plus producer surplus.

Suppose the world price is below the before-trade domestic price for a good. If a country allows free trade in this good,

consumers will gain and producers will lose.

Steak and chicken are substitutes. A sharp reduction in the supply of steak would

decrease consumer surplus in the market for steak and increase producer surplus in the market for chicken.

An increase in the price of a good along a stationary demand curve

decreases consumer surplus.

When a country allows trade and exports a good,

domestic producers are better off, domestic consumers are worse off, and the nation is better off because the gains of the winners exceed the losses of the losers.

Because producers are better able to organize than consumers are, we would expect there to be political pressure to create

import restrictions.

An increase in the price of a good along a stationary supply curve

increases producer surplus.

The nation of Openia allows free trade and exports steel. If steel exports were prohibited, the price of steel in Openia would be ________, benefiting steel ________.

lower, consumers

A demand curve reflects each of the following except the

quantity that each buyer will ultimately purchase .

In the economy of Agricola, tenant farmers rent the land they use from landowners. If the supply of land is perfectly inelastic, then a tax on land would have deadweight losses, and the burden of the tax would fall entirely on the

no, landowners

Producing a quantity larger than the equilibrium of supply and demand is inefficient because the marginal buyer's willingness to pay is

positive but less than the marginal seller's cost.

A buyer's willingness to pay is

that buyer's maximum amount he is willing to pay for a good.

The "unfair-competition" argument might be cited by an American who believes that

the French government's subsidies to French farmers justify restrictions on American imports of French agricultural products.

If a benevolent social planner chooses to produce more than the equilibrium quantity of a good, then

the cost of production on the last unit produced exceeds the value placed on it by buyers.

If a nation that imports a good imposes a tariff, it will increase

the domestic quantity supplied

The seller's cost of production is

the minimum amount the seller is willing to accept for a good.

If a benevolent social planner chooses to produce less than the equilibrium quantity of a good, then

the value placed on the last unit of production by buyers exceeds the cost of production.

A seller's opportunity cost measures the

value of everything she must give up to produce a good.

When a tax on a good starts small and is gradually increased, tax revenue will

first rise and then fall.


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