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1、精选优质文档-倾情为你奉上Outline for Reviewing Microeconomics (2013)3. Short Answer(310,30 points)Chapter 2questions for review: 5, 65. Explain why for many goods, the long-run price elasticity of supply is larger than theshort-run elasticity.The price elasticity of supply is the percentage change in the quanti
2、ty supplied divided by the percentage change in price. In the short run, an increase in price induces firms to produce more by using their facilities more hours per week, paying workers to work overtime and hiring new workers. Nevertheless, there is a limit to how much firms can produce because they
3、 face capacity constraints in the short run. In the long run, however, firms can expand capacity by building new plants and hiring new permanent workers. Also, new firms can enter the market and add their output to total supply.Therefore, the price elasticity of supply is larger in the long run than
4、 in the short run.6. Why do long-run elasticities of demand differ from short-run elasticities? Consider twogoods: paper towels and televisions. Which is a durable good? Would you expect the priceelasticity of demand for paper towels to be larger in the short run or in the long run? Why?What about t
5、he price elasticity of demand for televisions?Long-run and short-run elasticities differ based on how rapidly consumers respond toprice changes and how many substitutes are available. If the price of paper towels, anon-durable good, were to increase, consumers might react only minimally in the short
6、run- because it takes time for people to change their consumption habits. In the longrun, however, consumers might learn to use other products such as sponges or kitchentowels instead of paper towels. In this case, then, the price elasticity would be larger inthe long run than in the short run. In c
7、ontrast, the quantity demanded of durablegoods, such as televisions, might change dramatically in the short run following a pricechange. For example, the initial result of a price increase for televisions would causeconsumers to delay purchases because they could keep using their current TVs longer.
8、Eventually consumers would replace their televisions as they wore out or becameobsolete. Therefore, we expect the demand for durables to be more elastic in the shortrun than in the long run.Chapter 3 questions for review:1, 5;exercise: 21. What are the four basic assumptions about individual prefere
9、nces? Explain thesignificance or meaning of each.(1) Preferences are complete: this means that the consumer is able to compare andrank all possible baskets of goods and services. (2) Preferences are transitive: thismeans that preferences are consistent, in that if bundle A is preferred to bundle Ban
10、d bundle B is preferred to bundle C, then bundle A is preferred to bundle C. (3)More is preferred to less: this means that all goods are desirable, and that theconsumer always prefers to have more of a good. (4) Diminishing marginal rate ofsubstitution: this means that indifference curves are convex
11、, and that the slope ofthe indifference curve increases (becomes less negative) as we move down along thecurve.As a consumer moves down along her indifference curve she is willing to give upfewer units of the good on the vertical axis in exchange for one more unit of the goodon the horizontal axis.T
12、his assumption also means that balanced market baskets are generally preferred tobaskets that have a lot of one good and very little of the other good.5. What happens to the marginal rate of substitution as you move along a convexindifference curve? A linear indifference curve?The MRS measures how m
13、uch of a good you are willing to give up in exchange forone more unit of the other good, keeping utility constant. The MRS diminishes alonga convex indifference curve. This occurs because as you move down along theindifference curve, you are willing to give up less and less of the good on the vertic
14、alaxis in exchange for one more unit of the good on the horizontal axis. The MRS isalso the negative of the slope of the indifference curve, which decreases (becomescloser to zero) as you move down along the indifference curve. The MRS is constantalong a linear indifference curve because the slope d
15、oes not change. The consumer isalways willing to trade the same number of units of one good in exchange for theother.Chapter 4 questions for review:1, 3, 111. Explain the difference between each of the following terms:a. a price consumption curve and a demand curveThe difference between a price cons
16、umption curve (PCC) and a demand curve is thatthe PCC shows the quantities of two goods that a consumer will purchase as the priceof one of the goods changes, while a demand curve shows the quantity of one goodthat a consumer will purchase as the price of that good changes. The graph of thePCC plots
17、 the quantity of one good on the horizontal axis and the quantity of theother good on the vertical axis. The demand curve plots the quantity of the good onthe horizontal axis and its price on the vertical axis.b. an individual demand curve and a market demand curveAn individual demand curve plots th
18、e quantity demanded by one person at variousprices. A market demand curve is the horizontal sum of all the individual demandcurves for the product. It plots the total quantity demanded by all consumers atvarious prices.c. an Engel curve and a demand curveAn Engel curve shows the quantity of one good
19、 that will be purchased by a consumerat different income levels. The quantity of the good is plotted on the horizontal axisand the consumers income is on the vertical axis. A demand curve is like an Engelcurve except that it shows the quantity that will be purchased at different pricesinstead of dif
20、ferent income levels.d. an income effect and a substitution effectBoth the substitution effect and income effect occur because of a change in the priceof a good. The substitution effect is the change in the quantity demanded of the gooddue to the price change, holding the consumers utility constant.
21、 The income effect isthe change in the quantity demanded of the good due to the change in purchasingpower brought about by the change in the goods price.3. Explain whether the following statements are true or false.a. The marginal rate of substitution diminishes as an individual movesdownward along
22、the demand curve.True. The consumer maximizes his utility by choosing the bundle on his budget linewhere the price ratio is equal to the MRS. For goods 1 and 2, P1/P2 = MRS. As theprice of good 1 falls, the consumer moves downward along the demand curve for good1, and the price ratio (P1/P2) becomes
23、 smaller. Therefore, MRS must also becomesmaller, and thus MRS diminishes as an individual moves downward along thedemand curve.b. The level of utility increases as an individual moves downward along thedemand curve.True. As the price of a good falls, the budget line pivots outward, and the consumer
24、is able to move to a higher indifference curve.c. Engel curves always slope upwards.False. If the good is inferior, then as income increases, quantity demandeddecreases, and therefore the Engel curve slopes downwards.11. Explain which of the following items in each pair is more price elastic.a. The
25、demand for a specific brand of toothpaste and the demand for toothpaste ingeneralThe demand for a specific brand is more elastic because the consumer can easilyswitch to another brand if the price goes up.b. The demand for gasoline in the short run and the demand for gasoline in the longrunDemand in
26、 the long run is more elastic since consumers have more time to adjust toa change in price. For example, consumers can buy more fuel efficient vehicles, movecloser to work or school, organize car pools, etc.Chapter 6 questions for review:1, 5, 71. What is a production function? How does a long-run p
27、roduction function differ from ashort-run production function?A production function represents how inputs are transformed into outputs by a firm.In particular, a production function describes the maximum output that a firm canproduce for each specified combination of inputs. In the short run, one or
28、 more factorsof production cannot be changed, so a short-run production function tells us themaximum output that can be produced with different amounts of the variable inputs,holding fixed inputs constant. In the long-run production function, all inputs arevariable.5. What is the difference between
29、a production function and an isoquant?A production function describes the maximum output that can be achieved with anygiven combination of inputs. An isoquant identifies all of the different combinationsof inputs that can be used to produce one particular level of output.7. Isoquants can be convex,
30、linear, or L-shaped. What does each of these shapes tell youabout the nature of the production function? What does each of these shapes tell youabout the MRTS?Convex isoquants indicate that some units of one input can be substituted for a unitof the other input while maintaining output at the same l
31、evel. In this case, theMRTS is diminishing as we move down along the isoquant. This tells us that itbecomes more and more difficult to substitute one input for the other while keepingoutput unchanged. Linear isoquants imply that the slope, or the MRTS, is constant.This means that the same number of
32、units of one input can always be exchanged fora unit of the other input holding output constant. The inputs are perfect substitutesin this case. L-shaped isoquants imply that the inputs are perfect complements, andthe firm is producing under a fixed proportions type of technology. In this case thefi
33、rm cannot give up one input in exchange for the other and still maintain the samelevel of output. For example, the firm may require exactly 4 units of capital for eachunit of labor, in which case one input cannot be substituted for the other.Chapter 7 questions for review:3, 7, 143. Please explain w
34、hether the following statements are true or false.a. If the owner of a business pays himself no salary, then the accounting cost is zero,but the economic cost is positive.This is True. Since there is no monetary transaction, there is no accounting, orexplicit, cost. However, since the owner of the b
35、usiness could be employed elsewhere,there is an economic cost. The economic cost is positive, and reflectsing theopportunity cost of the owners time. The economic cost is the value of the ownerstime in his next best alternative, or the amount that the owner would earn if he tookthe next best job.7.
36、Assume that the marginal cost of production is increasing. Can you determinewhether the average variable cost is increasing or decreasing? Explain.When marginal cost is increasing, average variable cost can be either increasing ordecreasing as shown in the diagram below. Marginal cost begins increas
37、ing at outputlevel q1, but AVC is decreasing. This happens because MC is below AVC and istherefore pulling AVC down. AVC is decreasing for all output levels between q1 and q2.At q2, MC cuts through the minimum point of AVC, and AVC begins to rise becauseMC is above it. Thus, for output levels greate
38、r than q2, AVC is increasing.17.14. What is the difference between economies of scale and returns to scale?Economies of scale depend on the relationship between what happens to cost andwhen outpuoutput ! i.e., how does cost change when output is doubled? t is doubled.Returns to scale depend on what
39、happens to output when all inputs are doubled. Thedifference is that economies of scale reflect input proportions that change optimallyas output is increased, while returns to scale are based on fixed input proportions(such as two units of labor for every unit of capital) as output increases.Chapter
40、 8 questions for review:3, 4, 11Chapter 10 questions for review:2, 3, 5, 8Chapter 11 questions for review:1, 3, 4Chapter 12 questions for review:2, 6, 8, 10Chapter 14 questions for review:2, 4, 5Chapter 16questions for review:4, 7, 13Chapter 17 questions for review:6, 10;exercise: 3, 4Chapter 18ques
41、tions for review:1, 2, 3, 104. Caculation(210,20 points)Chapter 2 exercise:11Chapter 3 exercise:14, 16Chapter 4 exercise:9, 13Chapter 6 exercise:7, 8, 9Chapter 7 exercise:3, 9, 11Chapter 8 exercise:4, 5, 6, 7, 11Chapter 10 exercise:6, 7Chapter 11 exercise:4, 5Chapter 12 exercise:3(a/b/c/d), 4, 6(a/b/c)Chapter 14 exercise:8, 10(a/b/c)Chapter 18 exercise:3专心-专注-专业