Exam 16: Real-World Competition and Technology
Exam 1: Economics and Economic Reasoning158 Questions
Exam 2: The Production Possibility Model, Trade, and Globalization133 Questions
Exam 3: Economic Institutions163 Questions
Exam 4: Supply and Demand182 Questions
Exam 5: Using Supply and Demand163 Questions
Exam 6: Describing Supply and Demand: Elasticities216 Questions
Exam 7: Taxation and Government Intervention201 Questions
Exam 8: Market Failure Versus Government Failure197 Questions
Exam 9: Comparative Advantage, Exchange Rates, and Globalization118 Questions
Exam 10: International Trade Policy99 Questions
Exam 11: Production and Cost Analysis I194 Questions
Exam 12: Production and Cost Analysis II152 Questions
Exam 13: Perfect Competition170 Questions
Exam 14: Monopoly and Monopolistic Competition274 Questions
Exam 15: Oligopoly and Antitrust Policy142 Questions
Exam 16: Real-World Competition and Technology108 Questions
Exam 17: Work and the Labor Market150 Questions
Exam 18: Who Gets What the Distribution of Income131 Questions
Exam 19: The Logic of Individual Choice: the Foundation of Supply and Demand170 Questions
Exam 20: Game Theory, Strategic Decision Making, and Behavioral Economics103 Questions
Exam 21: Thinking Like a Modern Economist97 Questions
Exam 22: Behavioral Economics and Modern Economic Policy126 Questions
Exam 23: Microeconomic Policy, Economic Reasoning, and Beyond134 Questions
Exam 24: Economic Growth, Business Cycles, and Unemployment124 Questions
Exam 25: Measuring and Describing the Aggregate Economy229 Questions
Exam 26: The Keynesian Short-Run Policy Model: Demand-Side Policies220 Questions
Exam 27: The Classical Long-Run Policy Model: Growth and Supply-Side Policies133 Questions
Exam 28: The Financial Sector and the Economy214 Questions
Exam 29: Monetary Policy243 Questions
Exam 30: Financial Crises, Panics, and Unconventional Monetary Policy109 Questions
Exam 31: Deficits and Debt: the Austerity Debate150 Questions
Exam 32: The Fiscal Policy Dilemma119 Questions
Exam 33: Jobs and Unemployment78 Questions
Exam 34: Inflation, Deflation, and Macro Policy175 Questions
Exam 35: International Financial Policy211 Questions
Exam 36: Macro Policy in a Global Setting134 Questions
Exam 37: Structural Stagnation and Globalization125 Questions
Exam 38: Macro Policy in Developing Countries142 Questions
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Monitoring a monopoly to keep it efficient would itself be efficient if the extra profit achieved by:
(Multiple Choice)
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A contract that makes a manager's salary dependent on total profit would be a type of incentive-compatible contract.
(True/False)
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Natural monopolies enjoy strong economies of scale, and so as output increases:
(Multiple Choice)
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Economists often describe competition as a market structure.Why do they also think of competition as a process?
(Essay)
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Soda companies pay universities for the exclusive right to sell their products on campus. For example, the University of Buffalo agreed to sell only Pepsi on campus in exchange for $220,000 per year. This agreement:
(Multiple Choice)
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Perfect competition is more conducive to technological change than any of the other market structures.
(True/False)
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Suppliers who are kept out of the market generally do not retaliate because:
(Multiple Choice)
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Explain why X-inefficiencies are often associated with lazy monopolists.In your answer,make sure you define a lazy monopolist and X-inefficiency.
(Essay)
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The monitoring problem exists because employees' incentives differ from owners' incentives.
(True/False)
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The adoption of the QWERTY keyboard in the early days of mechanical typewriters, with its continued use today, has been suggested as a metaphor for:
(Multiple Choice)
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Using the basic supply/demand framework, economic analysis of market structure leads to the conclusion that:
(Multiple Choice)
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One reason why our laws and social mores work against competition is:
(Multiple Choice)
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The threat of a corporate takeover will help prevent lazy monopolist behavior and lead managers to run more efficient,more profitable firms in order to prevent being taken over.Wouldn't a more efficient,more profitable firm be even more inviting for a corporate takeover? Explain why not.
(Essay)
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The net effect of restricting entry into a market is to decrease the income of the remaining suppliers.
(True/False)
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The majority of large corporations are directly controlled by the owners of the corporation.
(True/False)
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If firms have to spend money on creating and protecting their monopoly power, they're going to buy:
(Multiple Choice)
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