STUDY GUIDE F/MICROECONOMICS
21st Edition
ISBN: 9781307066920
Author: McConnell
Publisher: MCG/CREATE
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 4, Problem 7P
Sub part (a):
To determine
The price and quantity of equilibrium.
Sub Part (b):
To determine
The price and quantity of equilibrium.
Sub Part (c):
To determine
The price and quantity of equilibrium.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Suppose that there are three beachfront parcels of land available for sale in Asilomar and six people who would each like to purchase one parcel. Assume that the parcels are essentially identical and that the minimum selling price of each is $445,000. The following table states each person's willingness and ability to purchase a parcel.
Person
Willingness and Ability to Purchase
(Dollars)
Ana
510,000
Charles
470,000
Dina
420,000
Gilberto
390,000
Juanita
380,000
Yakov
600,000
Which of these people will buy one of the three beachfront parcels? Check all that apply.
A. Ana
B. Charles
C. Dina
D. Gilberto
E. Juanita
F. Yakov
Assume that the three beachfront parcels are sold to the people that you indicated in the previous section. Suppose that a few days after the last of those beachfront parcels is sold, another essentially identical beachfront parcel becomes available for sale at a minimum price of $432,500. This fourth…
Suppose demand and supply are given by: (LO3, LO4)
Qx d = 14 − 1/2 Px and Qx s = 1/4Px − 1
a. Determine the equilibrium price and quantity. Show the equilibrium graphically.
B. Supposed a $ 12 excise tax is imposed on the good. Determine the new equilibrium price and quantity
C. How much tax revenue does the government earn with the $12 tax
Suppose demand and supply are given by: (LO3, LO4)Qx d = 14 − 1/2Px and Qx s = 1/4Px − 1a. Determine the equilibrium price and quantity.
Chapter 4 Solutions
STUDY GUIDE F/MICROECONOMICS
Ch. 4.A - Prob. 1ADQCh. 4.A - Prob. 2ADQCh. 4.A - Prob. 3ADQCh. 4.A - Prob. 1ARQCh. 4.A - Prob. 2ARQCh. 4.A - Prob. 3ARQCh. 4.A - Prob. 1APCh. 4 - Prob. 1DQCh. 4 - Prob. 2DQCh. 4 - Prob. 3DQ
Ch. 4 - Prob. 4DQCh. 4 - Prob. 5DQCh. 4 - Prob. 6DQCh. 4 - Prob. 7DQCh. 4 - Prob. 8DQCh. 4 - Prob. 9DQCh. 4 - Prob. 1RQCh. 4 - Prob. 2RQCh. 4 - Prob. 3RQCh. 4 - Prob. 4RQCh. 4 - Prob. 5RQCh. 4 - Prob. 6RQCh. 4 - Prob. 7RQCh. 4 - Prob. 1PCh. 4 - Prob. 2PCh. 4 - Prob. 3PCh. 4 - Prob. 4PCh. 4 - Prob. 5PCh. 4 - Prob. 6PCh. 4 - Prob. 7P
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- Look at Tables , which show, respectively, the willingness to pay and willingness to accept of buyers and sellers of bags of oranges. For the following questions, assume that the equilibrium price and quantity will depend on the indicated changes in supply and demand. Assume that the only market participants are those listed by name in the two tables. a. What are the equilibrium price and quantity for the data displayed in the two tables?b. What if, instead of bags of oranges, the data in the two tables dealt with a public good like fireworks displays? If al the buyers free ride, what will be the quantity supplied by private sellers?c. Assume that we are back to talking about bags of oranges (a private good), but that the government has decided that tossed orange peels impose a negative externality onthe public that must be rectified by imposing a $2-perbag tax on sellers. What is the new equilibrium price and quantity? If the new equilibrium quantity is the optimal quantity, by how…arrow_forwardFigure 1.1 shows a chart with the demand and supply curves for new Oxygen Ventilators that have now entered the Caribbean market. The demand and supply curves Demand(1) and Supply(1) respectively shown in Figure 1.1 are given by the following formulae: (Note that the price is in thousands of dollars and quantity in thousands of units) For the Demand curve Demand(1), P = -0.8Q + 6 For the Supply curve Supply(1), P = 0.4Q + 2 Using the equations given, calculate the equilibrium point for the demand for and supply of the new Oxygen Ventilators. Show all calculations.arrow_forwardSuppose demand and supply are given by: (LO3, LO4)Qx d = 14 − 1/2 Px and Qx s = 1/4Px − 1a. Determine the equilibrium price and quantity. Show the equilibrium graphically.arrow_forward
- Suppose a demand curve has a vertical intercept of (0,80). Suppose a supply curve has a vertical intercept of (0,0). The equilibrium price is $30 and the dollars. equilibrium quantity is 40. The total surplus is O 800 O 1600 O 2400 O 3200arrow_forwardSuppose that market supply and demand for Cola are linear and continuous. At competitive equilibrium, the price of Cola is $9.09, with 10 people each buying half a litre in quantity. The government subsidises the consumption of Cola by $2.7 per litre, and in doing so, leads the market to a new equilibrium price of $7.74 and quantity of 17 litres.What is the deadweight loss of this policy?O a. $9.09O b. $8.50O c. $32.40O d. $16.20 Type out the correct answer and give correct explanation of it within 40 50 minutes. Will give upvote only for the correct answer. Thank youarrow_forward1. Under what conditions and assumptions do markets maximize social welfare? 2. The maximization of social welfare in this model is defined as the maximization of consumer and producer surplus. Whose welfare is included in this interpretation of social welfare, and whose is excluded? 3. Do you think that social efficiency (defined as the maximization of consumer and producer surplus) is always an appropriate tool for analyzing the net impact of different policies? - Can you think of some policy situations in which social efficiency is a sufficient measure for determining which policies should be enacted? Explain. - Can you think of some policy situations in which social efficiency would be an inappropriate goal of policy discussions? Explain.arrow_forward
- A. Suppose that government imposed a binding price ceiling on some good and subsequently demand for the good increased . Which of the following would be true ? O a. Quantity exchanged would increase O b. Quantity exchanged would remain the same O c. Quantity exchanged would decrease O d. Amount of excess supply would increase. B. A market outcome will be efficient only if consumers and producers share the economic surplus equally . O. True O. Falsearrow_forwardH2. Given below are the demand and supply functions for three interdependent commodities Qd1 = 40 – 2P1 + 3P2 – 4P3 Qs1 = P1 – 10 Qd2 = 16 + 3P1 – 3P2 + 2P3 Qs2 = –4 + P2 Qd3 = 25 – 3P1 + 3P2 – 2P3 Qs3 = P3 – 5 a. Determine the equilibrium prices and quantities for the three commodity Market model. b. Compute the price and cross elasticities of demand for all three markets and interpret their coefficients. b. Compute the price and cross elasticities of demand for all three markets and interpret their coefficients.arrow_forwardSuppose that Samsung’s production costs are the same in both China and India. Also suppose that Samsung can produce cell phones in China for an average cost of $10 per phone for 300 million phones, $12 per phone for 200 million phones, and $15 per phone for 100 million phones. If customers in India demand 100 million phones and customers in China demand 200 million phones, Samsung’s lowest-cost option is to A. produce 150 million phones in India for Indian demand and 50 million to export to China and produce 150 million phones in China for Chinese demand. B. produce 100 million phones in India for Indian demand and produce 200 million phones in China for Chinese demand. C. produce phones only in India and export phones to China. D. produce phones only in China and export phones to India.arrow_forward
- Assume, the market price of milk is R.O 1.5 per liter. At this price, the buyers and sellers are able to buy and sell whatever they want. There is no shortage or surplus of milk in the market. From this context, analyze the statements given below and choose the correct statement. a. All of the options b. The price R.O 1.5 is the market clearing price of milk c. At the price R.O 1.5, the demand and supply of milk will be equal d. The price R.O 1.5 is the equilibrium price of milkarrow_forwardADVANCED ANALYSIS Assume the following values for the diagrams below: Q1 = 16 bags. Q2 = 11 bags. Q3 = 23 bags. The market equilibrium price is $53 per bag. The price at point a is $85 per bag. The price at point c is $5 per bag. The price at point d is $63 per bag. The price at point e is $38 per bag. The price at point f is $74 per bag. The price at point g is $39 per bag. Apply the formula for the area of a triangle (Area = ½ × Base × Height) to answer the following questions. a. What is the dollar value of the total surplus (= producer surplus + consumer surplus) when the allocatively efficient output level is produced? $ What is the dollar value of the consumer surplus at that output level? $ b.What is the dollar value of the deadweight loss when output level Q2 is produced? $ What is the total surplus when output level Q2 is produced? $ c.What is the dollar value of the deadweight loss when output level Q3 is produced? $ What is…arrow_forwardLook at the tables below, which show, respectively, the willingness to pay and willingness to accept of buyers and sellers of individual bags of oranges. For the following questions, assume that the equilibrium price and quantity will depend on the indicated changes in supply and demand. Assume that the only market participants are those listed by name in the two tables. Given that the equilibrium price is $8, what is the equilibrium quantity given the data displayed in the two tables?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles of MicroeconomicsEconomicsISBN:9781305156050Author:N. Gregory MankiwPublisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Microeconomics
Economics
ISBN:9781305156050
Author:N. Gregory Mankiw
Publisher:Cengage Learning