Review Questions for chap 3&4

Ace your homework & exams now with Quizwiz!

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 government-set price ceiling will lower equilibrium price and quantity in a market.

False

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

False

A price ceiling set by government will increase the equilibrium price and quantity in a market.

False

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

False

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

False

Because in any period of time and in any region the quantity of pollutants that can be absorbed by nature is fixed, the supply of pollutant rights will be perfectly elastic.

False

Excludability means that buyers who are willing and able to pay the market price for the product do not obtain its benefits, but those unable or unwilling to pay that price do obtain the benefits.

False

Government should subsidize a product whose consumption results in spillover costs in order to achieve the optimal level of output.

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

If the government sets a price floor above what would be the competitive market price of a product, a shortage of the product will develop.

False

If the legal price floor is set below the equilibrium price in a market, then a surplus will develop in the market.

False

Market failure occurs when not every consumer who wants a good can obtain it.

False

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

False

Surpluses drive market prices up; shortages drive them down

False

The free-rider problem makes a good profitable to provide by a private firm.

False

The government receives all of the benefits associated with the production of a public good.

False

The levying of governement revenue through the payment of licensing fees for automobiles is an example of the ability-to-pay principle of taxation.

False

The rationing function of prices refer to the fact that government must distribute any surplus goods that may be left in a competitive market.

False

The state and local tax structure is largely progressive.

False

Toothpaste and toothbrushes are substitute goods.

False

Whenever there are negative or positive externalities, the Coase theorem suggests that it is economically efficient for the government to intervene to resolve the externality problem.

False

A government subsidy per unit of output increases supply.

True

A government tax per unit of output reduces supply.

True

Allocative efficiency means achieving the optimal or most desired point on the production possibilities curve.

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

Consumers buy more of normal goods as their incomes rise.

True

Goods that are subject to excludability provide examples of private goods.

True

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

True

If the government pre-sets a price that turns out to be above the actual equilibrium price, a surplus will develop in the market.

True

In a competitive market, every consumer willing to pay the market price can buy a product and every producer willing to sell the product at that price can sell it.

True

Payroll taxes are regressive because they apply to only a fixed amount of one's income.

True

Productive efficiency means that goods and services are being produced by society in the least costly way.

True

Rivalry means that when one person buys and consumes a product, it is not available for purchase and consumption by another person.

True

Taxes on specific goods are a method to reduce negative externalities of polluting firms.

True

The Clean Air Act of 1990 sought to reduce acid rain by cutting emissions of sulfur dioxide.

True

The market demand curve for a pure public good shows the total value that all individuals place on each unit of the good.

True

The overall tax structure of the United States is proportional or slightly progressive.

True

The probably incidence of the tax on business property is on consumers.

True

The types and quantities of public goods produced are determined through the political process.

True


Related study sets

Chapter 17 - Understanding Accounting and Financial Information

View Set

Economics Chapter 12 - Gross Domestic Product and Growth

View Set

Vocabulary Workshop Level F Unit 1 - 10

View Set

Real estate investing practice exam

View Set

Biology 103 - Module 2 Study Guide

View Set