Exam 6: Demand and Elasticity
Exam 1: What Is Economics254 Questions
Exam 2: The Economony: Myth and Reality184 Questions
Exam 3: The Fundamental Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice278 Questions
Exam 4: Supply and Demand: an Initial Look297 Questions
Exam 5: Consumer Choice: Individual and Market Demand213 Questions
Exam 6: Demand and Elasticity247 Questions
Exam 7: Production, Inputs, and Cost: Building Blocks for Supply Analysis246 Questions
Exam 8: Output, Price, and Profit: the Importance of Marginal Analysis232 Questions
Exam 9: The Financial Markets and the Economy: the Tail That Wags the Dog225 Questions
Exam 10: The Firm and the Industry Under Perfect Competition219 Questions
Exam 11: The Case for Free Markets: the Price System251 Questions
Exam 12: Monopoly236 Questions
Exam 13: Between Competition and Monopoly248 Questions
Exam 14: Limiting Market Power: Antitrust and Regulation152 Questions
Exam 15: The Shortcomings of Free Markets210 Questions
Exam 16: The Economics of the Environment, and Natural Resources218 Questions
Exam 17: Taxation and Resource Allocation218 Questions
Exam 18: Pricing the Factors of Production230 Questions
Exam 19: Labor and Entrepreneurship: the Human Inputs267 Questions
Exam 20: Poverty, Inequality, and Discrimination167 Questions
Exam 21: An Introduction to Macroeconomics212 Questions
Exam 22: The Goals of Macroeconomic Policy212 Questions
Exam 23: Economic Growth: Theory and Policy226 Questions
Exam 24: Aggregate Demand and the Powerful Consumer216 Questions
Exam 25: Demand-Side Equilibrium: Unemployment or Inflation215 Questions
Exam 26: Bringing in the Supply Side: Unemployment and Inflation228 Questions
Exam 27: Managing Aggregate Demand: Fiscal Policy207 Questions
Exam 28: Money and the Banking System222 Questions
Exam 29: Monetary Policy: Conventional and Unconventional208 Questions
Exam 30: The Financial Crisis and the Great Recession64 Questions
Exam 31: The Debate Over Monetary and Fiscal Policy216 Questions
Exam 32: Budget Deficits in the Short and Long Run214 Questions
Exam 33: The Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment218 Questions
Exam 34: International Trade and Comparative Advantage215 Questions
Exam 35: The International Monetary System: Order or Disorder216 Questions
Exam 36: Exchange Rates and the Macroeconomy215 Questions
Exam 37: Contemporary Issues in the Useconomy23 Questions
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Suppose that a 15 percent decrease in price leads to an increase in the quantity demanded of 10 percent,
(Multiple Choice)
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Price elasticity of demand is a numerical measure of how much quantity demanded rises as price falls or quantity demanded falls as price rises.
(True/False)
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A fall in the price of a competing product will produce an outward shift in the demand curve for most products.
(True/False)
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When Scuba, Inc., lowered the price of a tank of compressed air by 20 percent, it sold 10 percent more tankfuls.The price elasticity for compressed air is
(Multiple Choice)
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The ratio of the percentage change in quantity demanded to the percentage change in income is known as the cross elasticity of demand.
(True/False)
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The relationships between elasticity and total revenue hold because
(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 6-2
-In Figure 6-2, the price elasticity of demand (dropping all minus signs) is ____ between P = 4 and P = 6 than between P = 10 and P = 12 because between the lower set of prices the percentage change in price is ____.

(Multiple Choice)
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A negative cross elasticity indicates that two goods are complements.
(True/False)
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The elasticity of demand for gasoline is likely to be relatively low in the short term and higher as the period of time gets longer.
(True/False)
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The elasticity of demand is determined partly by whether the good is a necessity or a luxury.
(True/False)
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A demand curve with an elasticity of 1.0 is said to be an elastic demand curve.
(True/False)
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Big Alice Ice Cream Parlor reduced its price of an ice cream cone from $1 to 90 cents.Sales consequently increased from 1,000 cones per week to 1,050 cones per week.The approximate price elasticity is
(Multiple Choice)
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If the reciprocal of the slope of a demand curve is calculated, this value is equal to the price elasticity of demand for that good.
(True/False)
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The formula for price elasticity of demand that is used in practice
(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 6-5
-In Figure 6-5, if price falls from point A to point B along the unit-elastic demand curve,

(Multiple Choice)
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If demand for a seller's product is elastic, a price increase will decrease total revenue.
(True/False)
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The term "unit elasticity" is used to describe a situation in which a rise in price is accompanied by
(Multiple Choice)
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A demand curve with unit elasticity can never touch either the vertical or horizontal axes.
(True/False)
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A price increase will always cause a firm's revenue to fall because they will sell less of the good.
(True/False)
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