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Homework answers / question archive / George Washington University - ECONOMICS 1011 THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics Economics 1011 Prof
George Washington University - ECONOMICS 1011
Economics 1011 Prof. Steve Suranovic
Section 14 Fall 2012
MIDTERM EXAM (WHITE) - Answers
(50 points total; 50 minutes total) Write the term or answer each question in the box provided on the right. The number of points for each question is given in parentheses.
Questions |
Answers |
1. (1) Economic models consist of a set of assumptions that generate a set of implications. What term describes this kind of reasoning? |
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2. (1) The monopoly model assumes this is the firm’s primary objective in the marketplace. |
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3. (1) To guarantee a unique trading outcome, the pure exchange model assumes both individuals achieve this objective. |
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4. (1) Name of the person most associated with the “invisible hand.” (full name required) |
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5. (1) In the exchange model with production profit seeking people will specialize in the good in which |
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they have a comparative advantage. Is this an assumption of the model or an implication of the model? |
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6. (1) Demand curves are usually assumed to be |
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linear, that is, straight lines. Is this assumption made more because it reflects reality or more because it simplifies the model? |
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7. (1) In the exchange model with production each |
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person has a comparative advantage in a different good. Is this an assumption of the model or an implication of the model? |
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8. (1) If Paul’s unit labor requirement for car washes is 15 minutes per car wash, what is Paul’s hourly car wash productivity? |
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9. (1) word used to describe a good whose cross price elasticity is positive. |
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10. (1) word used to describe a good whose demand |
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curve shifts left when there is a decrease in consumer income. |
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11. (1) of increase, decrease or stay the same, this is |
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what happens to total revenue if the product’s price decreases when its marginal revenue is positive. |
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12. (5) Consider the following production schedule for pins.
Workers (L) # of workers |
Output (Q) # of pins |
Marginal Product of Labor (MPL = ΔQ/ΔL)
|
0 |
0 |
|
1 |
200 |
|
2 |
375 |
|
3 |
425 |
|
4 |
550 |
|
5 |
650 |
|
6 |
725 |
|
7 |
775 |
|
(5) The following questions all pertain to the principle of opportunity cost.
A. (1) Suppose Tomas quits his accounting job with an annual salary of $30,000 to open a food truck business in Washington DC. Tomas estimates that his annual total revenue will be $200,000. His fixed cost will be $20,000 and his variable labor and food costs will be $70,000. What is Tomas’ annual opportunity cost of operating the food truck? |
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B. (2) Suppose during the weekend Tomas works in his home woodshop. Suppose Tomas’ productivity in wooden tables is one table per weekend while his productivity in wooden stools is 10 stools per weekend. What is Tomas’ opportunity cost of stools? Include units. |
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C. (2) Suppose Tomas’ friend Bjorn also builds tables and stools. Bjorn’s one month PPF is shown below. What is Bjorn’s opportunity cost of stool production? Include units.
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Economics 1011 Prof. Steve Suranovic
Section 14 Fall 2012
MIDTERM EXAM (WHITE) - Answers
(50 points total; 50 minutes total) Write the term or answer each question in the box provided on the right. The number of points for each question is given in parentheses.
Questions |
Answers |
1. (1) Economic models consist of a set of assumptions that generate a set of implications. What term describes this kind of reasoning? |
Deductive or a priori |
2. (1) The monopoly model assumes this is the firm’s primary objective in the marketplace. |
Maximize profit |
3. (1) To guarantee a unique trading outcome, the pure exchange model assumes both individuals achieve this objective. |
Maximize utility or ToT = MRS (plus variations) |
4. (1) Name of the person most associated with the “invisible hand.” (full name required) |
Adam Smith |
5. (1) In the exchange model with production profit seeking people will specialize in the good in which |
|
they have a comparative advantage. Is this an assumption of the model or an implication of the model? |
implication |
6. (1) Demand curves are usually assumed to be |
|
linear, that is, straight lines. Is this assumption made more because it reflects reality or more because it simplifies the model? |
simplifies |
7. (1) In the exchange model with production each |
|
person has a comparative advantage in a different good. Is this an assumption of the model or an implication of the model? |
assumption |
8. (1) If Paul’s unit labor requirement for car washes is 15 minutes per car wash, what is Paul’s hourly car wash productivity? |
15 mins = 1/4 hr/ CW à Prod = 4 car washes per hour |
9. (1) word used to describe a good whose cross price elasticity is positive. |
substitute |
10. (1) word used to describe a good whose demand |
|
curve shifts left when there is a decrease in consumer income. |
normal |
11. (1) of increase, decrease or stay the same, this is |
|
what happens to total revenue if the product’s price decreases when its marginal revenue is positive. |
increase |
12. (5) Consider the following production schedule for pins.
Workers (L) # of workers |
Output (Q) # of pins |
Marginal Product of Labor (MPL = ΔQ/ΔL)
|
0 |
0 |
--- |
1 |
200 |
200 |
2 |
375 |
175 |
3 |
425 |
50 |
4 |
550 |
125 |
5 |
650 |
100 |
6 |
725 |
75 |
7 |
775 |
50 |
workers.
See above (1.5pts, 1-?2 wrong; 1 pt, 3-?4 wrong, 0.5 pt, 5-?6 wrong)
Decreasing returns to scale then IRS between 3-?4 then DRS again (1pt) DRS (1pt)
IRS (1/2 pt)
CRS ( 0 pt)
Diseconomies of scale, OR Diseconomies followed by Economies followed by DEoS(1pt)
Average cost rises as output increases. (1 pt) OR draw graph below.
|
Output |
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Cost |
|
AC1 |
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AC2 |
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Must indicate average cost is a function of output
either verbally or by labeling graph. If they just say positive slope or upward sloping (1/2 pt)
A. (1) Suppose Tomas quits his accounting job with an annual salary of $30,000 to open a food truck business in Washington DC. Tomas estimates that his annual total revenue will be $200,000. His fixed cost will be $20,000 and his variable labor and food costs will be $70,000. What is Tomas’ annual opportunity cost of operating the food truck? |
OC = $30,000 + $20,000 + $70,000 =
$120,000
(1/2 pt for $90,000) |
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B. (2) Suppose during the weekend Tomas works in his home woodshop. Suppose Tomas’ productivity in wooden tables is one table per weekend while his productivity in wooden stools is 10 stools per weekend. What is Tomas’ opportunity cost of stools? Include units. |
1/10 table per stool |
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C. (2) Suppose Tomas’ friend Bjorn also builds tables and stools. Bjorn’s one month PPF is shown below. What is Bjorn’s opportunity cost of stool production? Include units.
|
80/100 = 8/10 = 4/5 =
0.8 table per stool |
15. (10) Suppose there are two sisters, Olga and Maria, who can allocate their daily work effort towards the production of apples and oranges. The joint production possibility frontier is plotted in the diagram. Using info from the graph, answer the following questions.
Olga, because her apple productivity @ 25 oranges/day is greater than Maria’s @ 15 oranges/day.