Principles Of Microeconomics (book With Myeconlab With Pearson Etext Access Card)
12th Edition
ISBN: 9780134435039
Author: CASE, Karl E.; Fair, Ray C.; Oster, Sharon E.
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 12, Problem 2.4P
To determine
Efficiency.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Harriet McNeil, proprietor of McNeil's Auto Mall, believes that it is good business for her automobile dealership to have more customers on the lot than can be served, as she believes this creates an impression that demand for the automobiles on her lot is high. However, she also understands that if there are far more customers on the lot than can be served by her salespeople, her dealership may lose sales to customers who become frustrated and leave without making a purchase.
Ms. McNeil is primarily concerned about the staffing of salespeople on her lot on Saturday mornings (8:00 a.m. to noon), which are the busiest time of the week for McNeil's Auto Mall. On Saturday mornings, an average of 6.8 customers arrive per hour. The customers arrive randomly at a constant rate throughout the morning, and a salesperson spends an average of one hour with a customer. Ms. McNeil's experience has led her to conclude that if there are two more customers on her lot than can be served at any time…
In economics, customer sorting rules are often applied to understand how customers choose among various options based on their preferences and the available information. Which of the following best describes a common customer sorting rule?
A. Price Maximization Rule
B. Utility Maximization Rule
C. Information Aversion Rule
D. Brand Loyalty Rule
Please refrain from offering handwritten solutions. Please ensure that your response maintains accuracy and quality to avoid receiving a downvote.
Take care of plagiarism.
Answer completely.
Suppose there are two types of persons: high-ability and low-ability. A particular diploma costs a high-ability person $8,000 and costs a low-ability person $20,000. Firms wish to use education as a screening device where they intend to pay $25,000 to workers without a diploma and $ K to those with a diploma. In what range must K be to make this an effective screening device?
Chapter 12 Solutions
Principles Of Microeconomics (book With Myeconlab With Pearson Etext Access Card)
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- Imagine a signaling model where there are two types of workers, low-productivity workers with a productivity of 10, and high-productivity workers with a productivity of 30. The proportion of low-productivity workers is .5. Firms are competitive and obtain profit equal to the productivity of the worker they hire. Workers can obtain one of three levels of education: e1, e2, and e3. Workers get utility equal to their wage minus the cost of education. Wages must be between 10 and 30. The cost of getting an education for low-productivity workers is e1 = 0, e2 = 9, e3 = 18. The cost of getting an education for high-productivity workers is e1 = 0, e2 =4, e3 = 8. A) Are there any pooling equilibria in this model? If so find all of them, if not, show why they do not exist.arrow_forwardAsymmetric information and/or imperfect information can cause two forms of market failure: 1) adverse selection and 2) moral hazard. Asymmetric information is where one party in the transaction has more information than the other party in the transaction. Imperfect information is a situation in which neither party has perfect information about the good/service being exchanged in a transaction. Such goods and services are sometime referred to as "experience goods." In the late 1990s, car leasing was very popular in the United States. A customer would lease a car from the manufacturer for a set term, usually two years, and then have the option of keeping the car. If the customer decided to keep the car, the customer would pay a price to the manufacturer, the “residual value,” computed as 60% of the new car price. The manufacturer would then sell the returned cars at auction. In 1999, the manufacturer lost an average of $480 on each returned car. (The auction price was, on average, $480…arrow_forwardQuestion 5 Snyder challenges Zwolinski's appeal to the nonworseness claim by arguing that sellers have a general duty of beneficence that becomes specified in the wake of a disaster, and this specified duty rules out price gouging. Group of answer choices True False Question 6 Anderson argues that the extent of the market should be limited because the market inherently involves exploitation. Group of answer choices True False Question 7 Brennan and Jaworski bring up the selling of pets in order to argue that placing a market price on something does not entail that it is viewed as of mere instrumental value. Group of answer choices True False Question 8 Brennan and Jaworski bring up the sexual practices of the Merina of Madagascar in order to argue that what money symbolizes is a social construct. Group of answer choices True Falsearrow_forward
- See attachments for question context. Question: Some people advocated the following modifiction of the auction rule. A bidder cannot bid for only one object, i.e., if at some point in time he withdraws from the bidding race for one object, he automatically withdraws the race for the other object. Every other aspect of the auction, including how prices increase over time, does not change. What should a bidder do if his valuation for the two objects are 50 and 60, respectively? Explain. Does the auction lead to an efficient allocation? Explain.arrow_forwardRoyal Dutch Shell has been doing business in Nigeria since the 1920s, and has announced new plans to develop oil and gas projects there. However, over the years Shell has confronted a series of episodes involving country risk. Shell’s operations are centred in Nigeria’s Ogoni region, where the local citizens have protested Shell’s drilling and refining activities, which are said to spoil the natural environment and reduce the amount of available farmland. Protestors also accuse Shell of extracting wealth from the region without adequately compensating local residents. Ogonis sabotaged Shell’s operations to such an extent that the firm suspended parts of its Nigerian operations. Shell also came under pressure to divest its Nigerian operations and to pay reparations to the locals. What proactive steps can Shell take to anticipate future country risk? What should Shell do to deal more effectively with country risk?arrow_forwardWhat if reducing the number of inspectors from 20 to 10 only increased the equilibrium bribe from $1,000 to $1,500? In this case, how much per year would the construction supervisor collect from his 10 inspectors? How much less is the construction supervisor getting than when he had 20 inspectors working in part b? In this case, will the construction supervisor be happy with the reduction in government services? Will he want to go back to using 20 inspectors?arrow_forward
- Asymmetric information and/or imperfect information can cause two forms of market failure: 1) adverse selection and 2) moral hazard. Asymmetric information is where one party in the transaction has more information than the other party in the transaction. Imperfect information is a situation in which neither party has perfect information about the good/service being exchanged in a transaction. Such goods and services are sometimes referred to as "experience goods." In the late 1990s, car leasing was very popular in the United States. A customer would lease a car from the manufacturer for a set term, usually two years, and then have the option of keeping the car. If the customer decided to keep the car, the customer would pay a price to the manufacturer, the "residual value," computed as 60% of the new car price. The manufacturer would then sell the returned cars at auction. In 1999, the manufacturer lost an average of $480 on each returned car. (The auction price was, on average, $480…arrow_forwardSeven years ago, you started a cross-town delivery service. You have two types of deliveryservices. You have a small parcel service for anything that is flat and measures less than 11x17. You have a package service using a 100 lb capacity bike trailer for anything weighting up to 10lbs. Initially, you charged the same price for each service, but since the beginning of the Covid19 pandemic you have seen an increased in the demand for your package service. The demand for the package services seems to be more inelastic than the demand for parcels. You are now wondering if you should charge different prices for the parcel and package service or should you segment the market and charge two different prices? Complete the tables below and determine the best price strategy: price the services differently in each segment; or continue the one price policy? The Parcels Market Price Parcels TR MR TC MC MR-MC…arrow_forwardSeven years ago, you started a cross-town delivery service. You have two types of deliveryservices. You have a small parcel service for anything that is flat and measures less than 11x17. You have a package service using a 100 lb capacity bike trailer for anything weighting up to 10lbs. Initially, you charged the same price for each service, but since the beginning of the Covid19 pandemic you have seen an increased in the demand for your package service. The demand for the package services seems to be more inelastic than the demand for parcels. You are now wondering if you should charge different prices for the parcel and package service or should you segment the market and charge two different prices? Complete the tables below and determine the best price strategy: price the services differently in each segment; or continue the one price policy? The Packages Market Price Packages TR MR TC MC…arrow_forward
- Seven years ago, you started a cross-town delivery service. You have two types of deliveryservices. You have a small parcel service for anything that is flat and measures less than 11x17. You have a package service using a 100 lb capacity bike trailer for anything weighting up to 10lbs. Initially, you charged the same price for each service, but since the beginning of the Covid19 pandemic you have seen an increased in the demand for your package service. The demand for the package services seems to be more inelastic than the demand for parcels. You are now wondering if you should charge different prices for the parcel and package service or should you segment the market and charge two different prices? Complete the tables below and determine the best price strategy: price the services differently in each segment; or continue the one price policy? Combined Parcels & PackagesPrice Parcels and Packages TR MR TC MC MR-MC…arrow_forwardCan ethnocentric predisposition result in Cultural and Marketing Myopia? Justify your answer with an example.arrow_forwardIndicate whether the statement is true or false, and justify your answer.New York has seen a majority of people change their behaviors because of the recent requirement that restaurants list the calorie counts for all their menu items.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Managerial Economics: A Problem Solving ApproachEconomicsISBN:9781337106665Author:Luke M. Froeb, Brian T. McCann, Michael R. Ward, Mike ShorPublisher:Cengage Learning
Managerial Economics: A Problem Solving Approach
Economics
ISBN:9781337106665
Author:Luke M. Froeb, Brian T. McCann, Michael R. Ward, Mike Shor
Publisher:Cengage Learning