Title: ECON 1001
1ECON 1001
2- Q1) After paying the movie distributor and
meeting all other non-interest expenses, the
owner expects to net 2.00 per ticket sold.
Construction costs are 1,000,000 per screen. How
many screens should be built if the real interest
rate is 7 ? -
- A) 1
- B) 2
- C) 3
- D) 4
- E) 5
- Ans B
3- We should use a cost-benefit analysis
- In particular, Marginal Benefit vs Marginal
Cost of installing ONE MORE screen. - MB of installing ONE MORE screen
- (increase in patrons)2
Installing the ? in patrons ? in revenue (MB)
1st 50000 100000
2nd 40000 80000
3rd 30000 60000
4th 20000 40000
5th 10000 20000
4- How about the MC of installing ONE MORE screen?
- Cost of constructing ONE screen 1,000,000
- If you save the money in a bank instead of
investing it in the cinema, how much do you get?
(r7 per annum) - So MC of installing ONE MORE screen 1m0.07
Installing the n-th screen Interest income forgone (MC)
1 70000
2 70000
3 70000
4 70000
5 70000
5Should you install the first screen? ? YES!
Because MBgtMCHow about the second one? The
third one?How many screens would you install in
total?
Installing the ? in revenue (MB) Interest income forgone (MC)
1st 100000 70000
2nd 80000 70000
3rd 60000 70000
4th 40000 70000
5th 20000 70000
6- Q2) Mike gives a non-refundable 100 to ACE
adventure to reserve a raft for a group rafting
trip in the New River. The raft has room for 5
people. He can only sell 3 tickets at 25 each
for a total of 75. Should Mike cancel the trip? - Yes, because he will lost 100.
- No, because he is making 75.
- Yes if Mike values going on the trip at less than
25. - No, because losing 25 is better than losing
100. - Yes, because he will lost 25 on the venture.
- Ans D
7- This is a question about opportunity cost.
- If Mike cancels the trip, he loses 100 and gets
nothing. Hence, the net loss is 100. - If the trip goes as planned, Mike loses 100, and
gets 75 back. The net loss is 25. - In other words, if he cancels, he loses 100 if
he goes, he loses 25 only.
8- As a rational economic agent, what would Mike
choose? - NOT to cancel the trip!
- Because losing 25 is better than losing 100
(D). - The key word in the question is non-refundable.
That means the 100 is already sunk. Mike would
endeavour to recover as much money as possible
from the venture.
9- Q3) How many hours should IBM employ Pam to
maximise its benefit from her employment? - 1 hour.
- 2 hours.
- 3 hours.
- 4 hours.
- 5 hours.
- Ans D
10- This is a slightly tricky question. However, all
we have to do is to apply the usual p-max
principle MRMC. - To summarise the information provided
- Cost of all hardware needed to assemble a
computer is 600
No. of Hours No. of Computers
1 1
2 4
3 8
4 10
5 11
11- To apply the MRMC principle, first, we need to
find out that Marginal Increment in No. of
Computers in each hour.
No. of Hours No. of Computers Additional Computers from the n-th hour
1 1 1
2 4 3
3 8 4
4 10 2
5 11 1
12- Then, we can find out the extra Revenue brought
along by the computers in each hour. (MR of hour) - To calculate the MRhour, multiply the price
(620) by Additional computers Computers.
No. of Hours No. of Computers Additional Computers from the n-th hour MRhour ()
1 1 1 620
2 4 3 1860
3 8 4 2480
4 10 2 1240
5 11 1 620
13- We then compute the MC of each working hour.
(MChour) - MChour is the sum of Pams wage and all hardware
costs (600 each computer).
No. of Hours No. of Computers Additional Computers from the n-th hour MChour ()
1 1 1 640
2 4 3 1840
3 8 4 2440
4 10 2 1240
5 11 1 640
14- To find the No. of hours that maximises IBMs
profit, find where MRhour MChour. - So the answer is 4 hours (D).
No. of Hours MChour () MRhour ()
1 640 620
2 1840 1860
3 2440 2480
4 1240 1240
5 640 620
15- Just to show that profit has been maximised...
- At 4th hour, Marginal Profit 0 (feature of
p-max)
No. of Hours MChour () MRhour () Mphour ()
1 640 620 -20
2 1840 1860 20
3 2440 2480 40
4 1240 1240 0
5 640 620 -20
16- Q4) How many hours should IBM employ Pam to
maximise its benefit from her employment if
output price is 640? - 1 hour.
- 2 hours.
- 3 hours.
- 4 hours.
- 5 hours.
- Ans E
17- We use the same technique as in Q3.
- However, the selling price of computers has
changed to 640. - This may affect Pams number of working hours.
- Is MC affected by the price change? How about
MR? - MC no change. MR different now. (recalculate)
18- To calculate the new MRhour schedule, multiply
640 by ?Computers for each hour.
No. of Hours No. of Computers Additional Computers from the n-th hour MRhour ()
1 1 1 640
2 4 3 1920
3 8 4 2560
4 10 2 1280
5 11 1 640
19- To find the No. of hours that maximises IBMs
profit, find where MRhour MChour. - So the answer is 5 hours (E).
No. of Hours MChour () MRhour ()
1 640 640
2 1840 1920
3 2440 2560
4 1240 1280
5 640 640
Note When there is an increase in output price,
the suppliers are likely to increase their
output, and hence employment.
20- Just to show that profit has been maximised...
- At 5th hour, Marginal Profit 0 (feature of
p-max)
No. of Hours MChour () MRhour () Mphour ()
1 640 640 0
2 1840 1920 80
3 2440 2560 120
4 1240 1280 40
5 640 640 0
21- Q5) Chris has been charging 1 for a pound of
potatoes. Suppose Chris faces a linear demand
curve. When P? to 0.90, TR drops. When P? to
1.10, TR also drops. Why? - 1 is the equilibrium price for potatoes.
- AT 0.90, there is excess demand for potatoes.
- 1.10 is more than Chriss customers reservation
prices. - Price elasticity of demand is unitary at 1.00.
- Both A and D must be true.
- Ans D
22- (A) claims that 1 is the equilibrium price.
- There is no basis for that.
- To determine the equilibrium price, we need to
have BOTH the demand and supply schedules.
Without this information, we cannot tell what
equilibrium price is. - Therefore, both (A) and (E) are wrong.
- Note that (B) and (C) also require additional
supply and demand information. Therefore, they
cannot be correct.
23- e must be unitary at 1 according to what
happened. - When demand is price inelastic, reducing the
price would lead to a drop in TR. That is
because ?Qd lt ?P. - When demand is price elastic, raising the price
would mean losing many customers, since they are
all very sensitive to price changes (?Qd gt ?P)
24- Since TR decreases whenever there is a deviation
from P 1.00, 1.00 must be the separation
point between the price elastic part of the
demand curve, and the price inelastic part of the
demand curve. - Therefore, (D) is the correct answer.
P
Elastic
Unitarily Elastic
1
Inelastic
Q
25- Q6) Pat earns 25,000 per year. Her partner,
Chris, earns 35,000 per year. They have 2
children. Childcare for their children is
12,000 per year. Pat has decided to be a
stay-home mum. Pat must - Be irrational.
- Value spending time with the children by more
than 25,000. - Value spending time with the children by more
than 12,000. - Value spending time with the children by more
than 13,000. - Value spending time with the children more than
Chris does. - Ans D
26- Pat has to choose between two alternatives.
- Net gain from alternative go work and pay for
childcare - 25000-12000 0 (value of quality time with her
children) - 13000
- Net gain from alternative Take care of children
herself - 0 0 value of quality time with her
children - value of quality time with her children
- Pat chose Choice II (stay-home mum), it must be
the case that - value of quality time with her children gt 13000
27- Q7) Suppose at the market eq. price of natural
gas, price elasticity of demand is -1.2, and
price elasticity of supply is 0.6. What will
result from a price ceiling that is 10 below the
mkt eq. price? - A shortage equal to 1.8 of the market eq.
quantity. - A shortage equal to 0.6 of the market eq.
quantity. - A shortage equal to 18 of the market eq.
quantity. - A shortage equal to 6 of the market eq.
quantity. - Ans C
28- Price Ceiling diagrammatic approach
Note that the price ceiling has impact on
quantity demanded AND quantity supplied.
29Finding The New Qs
P
S
PC
Q
Qe
QS
30Finding The New Qd
P
D
PC
Q
Qe
Qd
31Calculating the Shortage
- To calculate the shortage, simply find the
difference between Quantity Demanded and Quantity
Supplied. - Both Qd and Qs have been expressed in terms of
Qe. - Qd-Qs 0.18Qe
- Therefore, the shortage is 18 of the original
eq. quantity. Hence, (C).
32- Q8) Suppose the demand for gourmet coffee can be
represented by a linear demand curve. At the
prevailing market price, the INCOME ELASTICITY of
demand for gourmet coffee is 2. When income
rises, the demand for gourmet coffee - Becomes less elastic at every price.
- Becomes less elastic at the price that prevailed
before the change in income. - Becomes more elastic at every price.
- Becomes more elastic at price that prevailed
before the change in income. - Both A and B are both correct.
- Ans C
33- The first elasticity mentioned in the question is
INCOME ELASTICITY. - Income elasticity measures the responsiveness of
quantity demanded to changes in income. - A positive figure means the product is a normal
good. A negative figure denotes inferior good. - The second elasticity, the elasticity mentioned
in the 5 options, refers to price elasticity of
demand for gourmet coffee. - What affects the price elasticity of demand?
- Many factors, among which, the proportion of
expenditure on the item. (???e)
34- The INCOME ELASTICITY is 2.
- Suppose income now rises by 10 and price does
not change. - Quantity demanded will rise by 20.
- Consumers are now spending a HIGHER PROPORTION of
their income on gourmet coffee. - Therefore, the PRICE ELASTICITY of demand should
now be MORE ELASTIC at all prices than in the
past (before income increases). - Hence C.
35- Q9) Other things being equal, the increase in
rents that occur AFTER abolishing rent control is
smaller when - The own price elasticity of demand is inelastic.
- The own price elasticity of demand is elastic.
- The own price elasticity of demand is unitarily
elastic. - Rented homes and owned homes are substitutes.
- Rented homes and owned homes are complements.
- Ans B
36- Rent control is a form of PRICE CEILING.
- Price Ceiling is set at a price LOWER than the
market equilibrium price.
P
D
S
Trading Loci
Pe
Price Ceiling
Q
37- When Rent Control is imposed, Qd gt Qs.
- Equilibrium is not reached.
- And when the Price Ceiling is lifted, the market
equilibrium quantity and price should be restored
eventually. - Price (rent) should increase.
- Because supply is upward sloping,
- ?P ? ? TR
38Relative inelastic
P
D
S
Pe
Price Ceiling
Relative elastic
Q
Hence, the increase in rents that occur AFTER
abolishing rent control is smaller when (B) The
own price elasticity of demand is elastic.
39- Q10) What might cause a supply function to shift
to the LEFT? - An increase in the products own price.
- An expectation that the products own price will
fall in the future. - Endorsement of the product by a popular
celebrity. - An expectation that the products own price will
rise in the future. - A decrease in the price of one of the inputs to
making the product. - Ans D
40- When Supply shifts to the LEFT, is Supply
increasing or decreasing? - Decreasing.
- When Supply shifts to the left, quantity supplied
at all prices drops. - The shifting of the Supply schedule can be caused
by anything but a change in the current own
price. - A change in the current own price of the product
leads to a change in Qs only. Hence (A) is wrong.
41- (C) is also obviously wrong.
- When a product is publicly embraced by
celebrities, DEMAND is affected (demand will
shift to the right). - The celebrity factor does not affect the Supply
side. - Hence, (C) can be eliminated.
42- (E) is a sound reason for changes in Supply.
- A drop in the cost of production, esp. variable
costs, can shift the Supply curve. - However, the Supply should shift to the right
instead of shifting to the left. - Therefore, (E) is not the correct answer.
43- That leaves us with options (B) and (D).
- Both are related to expectations of the future
price. - Expectations on the future price can shift the
supply curve. - Note not talking about current price.
44- If a supplier expects price will be higher in the
future - Current stock should be held back as any unit
sold in the future earns more revenue than that
at present. - As a result, (D) is the correct answer.