Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Applications
Exam 1: The Big Ideas in Economics103 Questions
Exam 2: The Power of Trade and Comparative Advantage169 Questions
Exam 3: Business Fluctuations: Aggregate Demand and Supply114 Questions
Exam 4: Equilibrium: How Supply and Demand Determine Prices105 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Applications153 Questions
Exam 6: Taxes and Subsidies100 Questions
Exam 7: The Price System: Signals, Speculation, and Prediction149 Questions
Exam 8: Price Ceilings and Floors199 Questions
Exam 9: International Trade78 Questions
Exam 10: Externalities: When the Price Is Not Right146 Questions
Exam 11: Costs and Profit Maximization Under Competition126 Questions
Exam 12: Competition and the Invisible Hand29 Questions
Exam 13: Monopoly144 Questions
Exam 14: Price Discrimination and Pricing Strategy152 Questions
Exam 15: Oligopoly and Game Theory127 Questions
Exam 16: Competing for Monopoly: the Economics of Network Goods51 Questions
Exam 17: Monopolistic Competition and Advertising143 Questions
Exam 18: Labor Markets148 Questions
Exam 19: Public Goods and the Tragedy of the Commons153 Questions
Exam 20: Political Economy and Public Choice151 Questions
Exam 21: Economics, Ethics, and Public Policy143 Questions
Exam 22: Managing Incentives140 Questions
Exam 23: Stock Markets and Personal Finance53 Questions
Exam 24: Asymmetric Information: Moral Hazard and Adverse Selection133 Questions
Exam 25: Consumer Choice141 Questions
Exam 26: Gdp and the Measurement of Progress135 Questions
Exam 27: The Wealth of Nations and Economic Growth155 Questions
Exam 28: Growth, Capital Accumulation, and the Economics of Ideas: Catching up Vs the Cutting Edge145 Questions
Exam 29: Saving, Investment, and the Financial System146 Questions
Exam 30: Supply and Demand183 Questions
Exam 31: Unemployment and Labor Force Participation96 Questions
Exam 32: Inflation and the Quantity Theory of Money165 Questions
Exam 33: Transmission and Amplification Mechanisms133 Questions
Exam 34: The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations144 Questions
Exam 35: Monetary Policy139 Questions
Exam 36: The Federal Budget: Taxes and Spending158 Questions
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Why do supply curves tend to be more elastic over time?
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If the price elasticity of demand is 2 in absolute value, then when the price of Good X rises by 25 percent:
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Since the demand curve for computer chips is elastic, a decrease in the price of computer chips caused by an increase in productivity will:
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If the price of Good X rises from $4 to $5, and the quantity demanded of Good X falls from 200 units to 180 units, the price elasticity of demand is:
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If the supply of raw materials is ________, increasing their production leads to ________ per-unit costs.
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If the demand curve is inelastic a price ________ causes a(n) ________ in revenues.
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Farmers can produce more milk at lower cost, but Americans want to drink only so much milk. This suggests that the demand curve for milk is:
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(Figure: Midpoint Formula) Refer to the figure. Based on the midpoint formula, what is the elasticity of demand between $40 and $60? 

(Multiple Choice)
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The demand curve for oil is inelastic, meaning that the quantity of oil demanded:
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The elasticity of supply measures how sensitive the supply curve is to a change in price.
(True/False)
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(Table: Elasticities of Good X) Refer to the table. From the information in the table, what can you say about good X? In particular, is the demand for Good X rather elastic or inelastic? What does this imply about the number of substitutes that exist for Good X? Does Good Y appear to be a substitute for Good X? Does Good X appear to be a normal or inferior good? Finally, is the elasticity of supply for Good X relatively elastic or inelastic? 

(Essay)
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If the price elasticity of demand for a product is 2 in absolute value, and the price elasticity of supply for the same product is 1, what is the predicted percent change in price from a 5 percent fall in the supply?
(Multiple Choice)
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The demand for oil would become less elastic if the price of oil increases by a significant amount for a long period of time.
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If the price elasticity of supply is 0.75, then when the price of Good Y falls by 10 percent:
(Multiple Choice)
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Tonya consumes 40 steaks a year when her yearly income is $40,000. After her income falls to $35,000 a year, she consumes only 35 steaks a year. Calculate her income elasticity of demand for steaks.
(Multiple Choice)
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(Figure: Elasticity of Swim Trunks) The demand for swim trunks appears in the figure. What is the elasticity of demand for swim trunks? Suppose that your swimwear business is currently overstocked with swim trunks. If you want to sell 18 percent more swim trunks, how much should you cut your price? Figure: Elasticity of Swim Trunks
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