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Session 2-Practice Problems-Answer Key

This document provides the answer key to 4 practice problems: 1) It finds the price, quantity, and price elasticity of demand for Dolan Corporation's small engines given a demand curve. 2) It calculates the price elasticity of demand for Chidester Company's product using a given demand function. 3) It indicates whether demand curves for gold would shift given changes in demand from different industries. 4) It uses a linear demand curve to calculate revenue, consumer surplus, and their changes when price increases from Rs. 5000 to Rs. 7500.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
197 views5 pages

Session 2-Practice Problems-Answer Key

This document provides the answer key to 4 practice problems: 1) It finds the price, quantity, and price elasticity of demand for Dolan Corporation's small engines given a demand curve. 2) It calculates the price elasticity of demand for Chidester Company's product using a given demand function. 3) It indicates whether demand curves for gold would shift given changes in demand from different industries. 4) It uses a linear demand curve to calculate revenue, consumer surplus, and their changes when price increases from Rs. 5000 to Rs. 7500.

Uploaded by

Muskaan Musicid
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MGEC: Session 2

Practice Problems Answer Key

Practice Problem 1

The Dolan Corporation, a maker of small engines, determines that in 2008 the demand curve for its
product is P = 2000 - 50Q, where P is price (in dollars) of an engine and Q is the number of engines
sold per month.
a) To sell 20 engines per month, what price would Dolan have to charge?

Given, demand curve for small engines:


P = 2000 - 50Q ……………………………………………..………………………………………………………………..………(1)
At Q = 20, P can be found by plugging Q = 20 in the equation (1)
P = $1000

b) If managers set a price of $500, how many engines will Dolan sell per month?

To find the number of engines (Q) which Dolan will sell per month, plug P = $500 in equation (1).
Q = 30

c) What is the price elasticity of demand if price equals $500?

𝑑𝑄 𝑃
ϵd = ×
𝑑𝑃 𝑄

Demand Equation: P=2000-50Q. At price = $500, we can find the corresponding quantity by
plugging it into the demand equation:

500 = 2000 − 50𝑄


50𝑄 = 1500
𝑄 = 30

Also, the demand equation can be expressed in terms of Q;


𝑃 = 2000 − 50𝑄
50𝑄 = 2000 − 𝑃
𝑃
𝑄 = 40 −
50
𝑑𝑄 −1
Differentiating the demand function 𝑑𝑃 = 50

Now, we have to substitute the values in the elasticity formula:

𝑑𝑄 𝑃
ϵd =𝑑𝑃 × 𝑄

−1 500
ϵd = 50 × 30
−1
ϵd = 3

d) At what price, if any, will demand for Dolan's engines be unitary elastic?

We know that ϵd = -1

𝑑𝑄 𝑃
Since, ϵd =𝑑𝑃 × 𝑄

−1 (2000−50𝑄)
-1 = 50 × 𝑄

Solve for Q, Q=20


To find Price, plug Q = 20 it into the demand function;

𝑃 = 2000 − 50𝑄
𝑃 = 2000 − 1000
𝑃 = $1000

Thus, demand for Dolan's engines will be unitary elastic at a price of $1000.

Practice Problem 2

After a careful statistical analysis, the Chidester Company concludes the demand function for its
product is Q = 500 - 3P + 2Pr + 0.1I where Q is the quantity demanded of its product, P is the price of
the product, Pr is the price of its rival's product, and I is per capita disposable income (in dollars). At
present, P = $10, Pr = $20 and I = $6000.

a) What is the price elasticity of demand for the firm's product?


Demand function:
Q = 500 - 3P + 2Pr + 0.1I
Plugging P = $10, Pr = $20 and I = $6000 into the demand function; Q=1110
Formula for price elasticity of demand:

𝑑𝑄 𝑃
ϵd =𝑑𝑃 × 𝑄

10
ϵd = −3 ×
1110

ϵd = -3/111 = -0.027

Practice Problem 3

From November 2007 to March 2008, the price of gold increased from $865 per ounce to over $1,000
per ounce. Newspaper articles during this period said there was no increased demand from the
jewelry industry but significantly greater demand from investors who were purchasing gold because
of the falling dollar. For each of the following demand curves, indicate whether the curve shifted
inwards, outwards, or did not shift at all.

a) Gold demand by jewelry industry: No shift in demand curve

b) Gold demand by investors: Demand curve shifts outwards

c) Aggregate demand for gold: Market demand curve shifts outward as it is horizontal summation
of gold demand by jewelry industry and investors.

Practice Problem 4

Given demand equation Q=40000-4P,


a. Find the revenue that the firm may earn if the price is Rs. 5000.
Revenue = Price * Quantity
At price of Rs. 5000, quantity demanded will be 20000 units. (Plug 5000 in the demand
equation)
Revenue = Price * Quantity
Revenue = 5000*20000 = Rs. 100,000,000
b. Graph the function and use the ‘area under the curve’ approach to do the above
computation.

Q = 40000-4P
Price

10000

5000

0 20000 40000 Quantity

Using ‘area under the curve’ approach, revenue will be the area (L*B) of the blue triangle.
Revenue = 5000*20000 = Rs. 100,000,000

c. Find the consumer surplus


Consumer surplus is given by the area of the triangle; above market price (P=5000) and below
1
the demand curve. We can use the formula for area of a triangle = 2 × base × height, to
calculate the consumer surplus. In this case the base of the triangle is 20000 and the height is
5000 (10000-5000), therefore

1
Consumer Surplus = × 20000 × 5000 = 50,000,000
2

Q = 40000-4P
Price

10000

Consumer Surplus

5000

0 20000 40000 Quantity

d. Find change in revenue and change in consumer surplus if the price increases to Rs. 7500.
If price increase to Rs. 7500, the quantity demanded will be 10000 units.
New Revenue = 7500*10000 = Rs. 75,000,000
Revenue falls by Rs. 25,000,000
1
New Consumer Surplus = 2 × 10000 × 2500 = 12,500,000
Consumer surplus falls by 37,500,000.
Q = 40000-4P
Price

10000 New Consumer Surplus

7500 New Revenue

5000

0 10000 20000 40000 Quantity

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