Hellman Midterm2 Answers
Hellman Midterm2 Answers
1
Economic Costs and Economic Profit
1) Accountants include ________________ costs as part of a firm's costs, while economists include
costs.
A) explicit; no explicit
B) implicit; no implicit
Answer: D
2) In the short run, ________ factors of production are fixed, while in the long run, ________ of them are.
A) Some; none
B) All; none
Answer: A
Answer: B
B) firms are able to alter some, but not all, of their factors of production.
Answer: B
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5)Diminishing marginal returns implies that:
Answer: B
Answer: D
number of workers units of output
0 0
1 10
2 30
3 44
4 55
Table 8.1
7)Refer to Table 8.1, which gives a firm's production function. Assume that all non -labor inputs are
fixed. Diminishing marginal returns set in with the addition of the:
A) third worker.
B) fourth worker.
C) fifth worker.
D) sixth worker.
Answer: A
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Number of
Units of output
workers
0 0
1 25
2 55
3 95
4 125
5 150
Table 8.2
8)Refer to Table 8.2, which gives a firm's production function. Assume that all non-labor inputs are fixed.
The marginal product is maximized when the firm hires:
A) 2 workers.
B) 3 workers.
C) 4 workers.
D) 5 workers.
Answer: B
Answer: D
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10) Refer to Figure 8.1, which shows a family of average cost curves. The average total cost curve is
represented by:
A) curve 1.
B) curve 2.
C) curve 3.
Answer: A
11)Refer to Figure 8.1, which shows a family of average cost curves. The average fixed cost curve is
represented by:
A) curve 1.
B) curve 2.
C) curve 3.
Answer: C
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Output Total Cost
0 15
1 25
2 33
3 40
4 48
5 58
6 70
Table 8.5
12)Refer to Table 8.5. The total fixed cost of producing two units is:
A) $0.
B) $8.
C) $11.
D) $15.
Answer: D
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13) Figure 8.2 presents a firm 's marginal, average total, average fixed, and average variable cost curves. The
firm faces fixed costs of:
A) $130.
B) $20.
C) $110.
D) $4000.
Answer: D
C) the output level beyond which the firm will not experience scale economies.
D) the output level beyond which the firm will experience scale economies.
Answer: C
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Chapter 9 Perfect Competition
C) no barriers to entry
Answer: D
16) Which of the following is the best example of a perfectly competitive firm?
Answer: D
Answer: C
18) Jerry ' s Quarry sells building stone in a perfectly competitive market. At its current level of building stone
production, Jerry's Quarry has marginal costs equal to $45, and AVC is rising. If the market price of building
stone is $50, Jerry's Quarry should:
Answer: C
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19) Figure 9.1 shows the cost structure of a firm in a perfectly competitive market. If the market price is $40, the
firm' s profit maximizing output level is:
A) 500.
B) 650.
C) 900.
D) 1,200.
Answer: C
20) Figure 9.1 shows the cost structure of a firm in a perfectly competitive market. If the firm's fixed cost
increases by 3,000 due to a new government regulation,
A) the marginal cost curve shifts upward.
Answer: C
21) A firm will not shut down in the short run as long as at the point where MR = MC:
A) P >AVC.
B) P >ATC.
C) P >MC.
D) P >AFC.
Answer: A
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22) Figure 9.4 shows the cost structure of a firm in a perfectly competitive market. If the market price is $3 and
the firm produces the output where MR =MC, its profit is:
A) -$300.
B) -$600.
C) -$900.
C) -$1,200.
Answer: D
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23) A firm's marginal cost curve above the average variable cost curve is also:
Answer: C
24) If a perfectly competitive firm charges a price that is equal to its average total cost:
Answer: A
Answer: D
26) If the market demand decreases for a good sold in a perfectly competitive market, firms in the market:
Answer: B
A) will be positive.
B) will be negative
C) will be zero.
Answer: C
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28) A constant cost industry is one in which:
Answer: A
B) A monopolist is a price-taker.
Answer: B
A) a patent
B) government licensing
Answer: D
A) A firm is open for business only at certain hours of the day, and has its doors locked at other times.
B) The government grants licenses to taxicab drivers, without which it is illegal to operate a taxicab.
D) Lack of a website.
Answer: B
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32) A monopoly may arise due to:
A) a patent
Answer: D
Price Quantity
9 1
8 2
7 3
6 4
5 5
4 6
3 7
2 8
1 9
Table 10.1
33) Refer to Table 10.1, which shows the relationship between the price that Gladys charges for a product and
the quantity of that product that Gladys sells. The total revenue that Gladys receives from selling four
units of output is:
A) $4.
B) $6.
C) $10.
D) $24.
Answer: D
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34) Figure 10.1 shows a monopolist' s demand curve. If the monopolist increases output from two to three units,
what is its marginal revenue?
A) $3.
B) $12.
C) $15.
D) $5.
Answer: A
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35) The firm in figure 10.3 will produce:
A) Q1.
B) Q2.
C) Q3
D) Q4.
Answer: B
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36) Suppose that Figure 10.4 shows a monopolist's demand curve, marginal revenue, and its costs. The
monopolist would maximize its profit by producing a quantity of:
A) 30 units.
B) 50 units.
C) 60 units.
D) There is no sufficient information.
Answer: A
37) Refer to Figure 10.4. If the market was a monopoly, the consumer surplus would be:
A) $625.
B) $300.
C) $225
D) $450.
Answer: C
38) Refer to Figure 10.4. The deadweight loss associated with the monopoly would be represented by the
area:
A) abe.
B) ace.
C) ade.
D) efg.
Answer: C
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39) The merits of a patent system is:
A) the patent system gives firms strong incentives to take the risk of substantial research and
development costs.
B) the patent system may precipitate the development of new products.
C) granting monopoly power through a patent may be beneficial from society ' s perspective.
Answer: D
Answer: C
41) The government allows firms to engage in price discrimination unless the practice:
Answer: C
42) Suppose that a price discriminating monopolist is able to divide its market into two groups. If the firm
sells its product for $50 to the group whose customers have the most elastic demand, what price are they
likely to charge to the group whose customers have the least elastic demand?
A) $50
Answer: B
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Chapter 11 Market Entry and Monopolistic Competition
43) When a second firm enters a monopolist's market:
Answer: A
Answer: D
Answer: C
B) I and II only
Answer: D
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47) The word "monopolistic" in the label "monopolistic competition" refers to the fact that:
Answer: C
48) The monopolistically competitive firm in figure 11.6 will produce where:
A) MC = MR.
B) MC =D
C) MR = D
Answer: A
49) Where the monopolistically competitive firm in figure 11.6 produce s it will:
B) suffer a loss.
Answer: C
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50) A benefit to consumers of monopolistically competitive markets is that:
Answer: B
Answer: A
52)In which of the following ways is a monopolistically competitive firm l ike a monopoly firm?
A) Firms face a horizontal demand curve.
B) Firms earn economic profits greater than zero in the long run.
Answer: C
53) Since people generally know that celebrities are paid to endorse products, celebrity endorsements
signal to consumers that:
A) the product is likely to be popular.
Answer: A
54) Among his many endorsement contracts professional golfer Tiger Wood endorses Buick automobiles.
Buick reportedly recently extended his contract for another 5 years at $8 million per year. If Buick makes
$4,000 profit per car they must expect to sell at least:
A) $40 million worth of extra cars per year due to Woods ' endorsement of them.
B) $8 million worth of extra cars per year due to Woods ' endorsement of them.
C) 10,000 extra cars per year due to Woods ' endorsement of them.
Answer: D
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55) Studies of real world markets suggest that prices and the number of firms of comparable size in a market
are:
A) positively related.
C) not related.
Answer: B
56) Nike has used Michael Jordan to create the impression that Air Jordan basketball shoes are
superior to any other basketball shoe. Nike is attempting to:
A) differentiate Air Jordan basketball shoes from other types of basketball shoe.
C) sell fewer Air Jordan basketball shoes so they can raise the price.
D) convince consumers that Air Jordan basketball shoes are identical to other basketball shoes.
Answer: A
B) an oligopoly market.
C) a monopoly market.
Answer: B
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Firm Market Share (%)
1 40
2 30
3 12
4 10
5 5
6 3
Table 12.1
58) The four-firm concentration ratio for the market depicted in Table 12.1 is:
A) 82%
D) 40%
E) 10%
F) 92%
Answer: D
A) a monopoly.
B) a duopoly.
C) a cartel.
D) monopolistic competition.
Answer C
Answer: A
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61) Figure 12.2 shows demand, marginal revenue, and costs of a duopolist. If the two duopolists have the
same costs and split the market equally, each profit maximizing duopolist will earn a profit of ____ .
A) $30,000
B) $15,000
C) $10,000
D) $0
Answer: C
A) maximizes profits.
Answer: D
B) instability in oligopoly.
Answer: A
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64) A firm announces that it will refund the difference between its price and any price of a competitor that is
lower. This is an example of:
A) predatory pricing.
B) tying contracting.
Answer: D
65) Which one of the following is n o t a retaliation strategy that firms would apply to one that
cheated on a price-fixing scheme by selling at a price below the agreed-upon fixed price?
A) All other firms sell at the same low price as the cheating firm.
B) All other firms sell at a price that ensures zero economic profit for all firms.
C) Each period, all other firms sell at the price picked by the cheater in the previous period.
Answer: D
B) evidence for the kinked demand model in the rest of the world but not in the United States.
D) evidence for the kinked demand model in the United States but nowhere else.
Answer A
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67) At quantities less than Q1 in figure 12.4,:
C) demand is inelastic.
Answer: B
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68) Consider Figure 12.5. The dominant strategy in the prisoners' dilemma is:
Answer: A
D) so low that other firms are prevented from entering the market.
Answer: D
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70) Figure 12.8 depicts an advertising game between two stores. The outcome of the game will be that:
Answer: A
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