Exam 5: Background to Demand: Consumer Choices
Exam 1: What Is Economics59 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist54 Questions
Exam 3: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand56 Questions
Exam 4: Elasticity and Its Applications58 Questions
Exam 5: Background to Demand: Consumer Choices61 Questions
Exam 6: Background to Supply: Firms in Competitive Markets54 Questions
Exam 7: Consumers, Producers and the Efficiency of Markets56 Questions
Exam 8: Supply, Demand and Government Policies51 Questions
Exam 9: The Tax System48 Questions
Exam 10: Public Goods, Common Resources and Merit Goods58 Questions
Exam 11: Market Failure and Externalities61 Questions
Exam 12: Information and Behavioural Economics60 Questions
Exam 13: Firms Production Decisions47 Questions
Exam 14: Market Structures I: Monopoly57 Questions
Exam 15: Market Structures Ii: Monopolistic Competition59 Questions
Exam 16: Market Structures Iii: Oligopoly55 Questions
Exam 17: The Economics of Factor Markets60 Questions
Exam 18: Income Inequality and Poverty60 Questions
Exam 19: Interdependence and the Gains From Trade56 Questions
Exam 20: Measuring a Nations Well-Being60 Questions
Exam 21: Measuring the Cost of Living59 Questions
Exam 22: Production and Growth60 Questions
Exam 23: Unemployment60 Questions
Exam 24: Saving, Investment and the Financial System60 Questions
Exam 25: The Basic Tools of Finance57 Questions
Exam 26: Issues in Financial Markets59 Questions
Exam 27: The Monetary System60 Questions
Exam 28: Money Growth and Inflation59 Questions
Exam 29: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts60 Questions
Exam 30: A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy61 Questions
Exam 31: Business Cycles55 Questions
Exam 32: Keynesian Economics and the Is-Lm Analysis60 Questions
Exam 33: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply60 Questions
Exam 34: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand41 Questions
Exam 35: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment52 Questions
Exam 36: Supply-Side Policies57 Questions
Exam 37: Common Currency Areas and European Monetary Union55 Questions
Exam 38: The Financial Crisis and Sovereign Debt60 Questions
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Nathalie is maximizing total utility while consuming food and clothing. Her marginal utility from food and clothing is 50 and 25, respectively. If clothing is priced at €10 per unit, the price of food must
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is the best example of rational behaviour?
(Multiple Choice)
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Indifference curves tend to be bowed inward because a consumer is willing to trade a greater amount of a good for another if they have an abundance of the good they are trading away.
(True/False)
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Indifference curves tend to be bowed inward because of diminishing
(Multiple Choice)
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If the price of a good falls and the good is an inferior good, the income effect causes a decrease in the quantity demanded of that good.
(True/False)
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In the upward-sloping portion of the individual labour supply curve, the substitution effect is __________ the income effect.
(Multiple Choice)
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If income were to double and prices were to double, the budget line would
(Multiple Choice)
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When drawn on a graph that measures the quantity of a good on each axis, indifference curves are usually straight lines that slope downward (negatively).
(True/False)
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Claudia spends all of her income on warm-up suits and running shoes, and the price of a warm-up suit is four times as large as the price of a pair of shoes. Then, in order to maximize total utility, Claudia should
(Multiple Choice)
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Mario consumes only cheese and crackers.
a) Could these both be inferior goods for Mario? Explain.
b) Suppose that cheese is a normal good for Mario while crackers is inferior. If the price of cheese falls explain what happens to Mario's consumption of both cheese and crackers.
(Essay)
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Refer to Exhibit 4. Suppose that the consumer must choose between buying socks and belts. Also, suppose that the consumer's income is €100. Suppose that the price of a pair of socks has falls from €5 to €2. The income effect is represented by the movement from point?

(Multiple Choice)
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Evaluate the following statement, "Warren Buffet is the second richest person in the world. He does not face any constraint on his ability to purchase commodities he wants."
(Essay)
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Suppose the price of a pizza is €8, the price of a milk shake is €2, and the consumer's weekly income is €32. Suppose we have constructed the consumer's budget line with pizzas on the vertical axis and milk shakes on the horizontal axis. Given this information, if the consumer's income rises to €48, then what will happen to the consumer's budget line?
(Multiple Choice)
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If the price of a good falls and the good is a normal good, the income effect causes a decrease in the quantity demanded of that good.
(True/False)
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Suppose Roberto always consumes two packets of sugar with his tea. Roberto's indifference curves for sugar and tea are
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose the price of a pizza is €8, the price of a milk shake is €2, and the consumer's weekly income is €32. Suppose we have constructed the consumer's budget line with pizzas on the vertical axis and milk shakes on the horizontal axis. Given this information, if the price of a milk shake doubles to €4, then what will happen to the budget line?
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose a consumer must choose between the consumption of sandwiches and pizza. If we measure the quantity of pizza on the horizontal axis and the quantity of sandwiches on the vertical axis, and if the price of a pizza is €10 and the price of a sandwich is €5, then the slope of the budget constraint is
(Multiple Choice)
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