Exam 11: Price and Output in Monopoly, Monopolistic Competition, and Perfect Competition
Exam 1: Introduction150 Questions
Exam 2: Production Possibilities and Opportunity Costs166 Questions
Exam 3: Demand and Supply144 Questions
Exam 4: Elasticity160 Questions
Exam 5: Happiness, Utility, and Consumer Choice152 Questions
Exam 6: Price Ceilings and Price Floors159 Questions
Exam 7: Entrepreneurship and Business Ownership152 Questions
Exam 8: Costs of Production142 Questions
Exam 9: Maximizing Profit156 Questions
Exam 10: Identifying Markets and Market Structures181 Questions
Exam 11: Price and Output in Monopoly, Monopolistic Competition, and Perfect Competition185 Questions
Exam 12: Price and Output Determination Under Oligopoly193 Questions
Exam 13: Antitrust and Regulation157 Questions
Exam 14: Externalities, Market Failure, and Public Choice183 Questions
Exam 15: Wage Rates in Competitive Labor Markets164 Questions
Exam 16: Wages and Employment: Monopsony and Labor Unions164 Questions
Exam 17: Interest, Rent, and Profit184 Questions
Exam 18: Income Distribution and Poverty161 Questions
Exam 19: International Trade167 Questions
Exam 20: Exchange Rates, Balance of Payments, and International Debt174 Questions
Exam 21: The Economic Problems of Less-Developed Economies115 Questions
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Monopoly is preferred to perfect competition due to its efficiency characteristics.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
In perfect competition, the individual firm's long-run supply curve is the segment of
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
Sam quits his job as an airline pilot and opens his own pilot training school. He was earning $40,000 as a pilot. He withdraws $10,000 from his savings where he was earning 6 percent interest and uses the money in his new business. He uses a building he owns as a hangar that he could have rented out for $5,000 per year. He rents a computer for $1,200,buys office supplies for $500, rents an airplane for $6,000, pays $1,300 for fuel and maintenance, and hires one worker for $30,000. Sam's total revenue from pilot training classes this year equaled $90,400. Sam's explicit costs this year equal
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
B
For the past three years, you have earned economic profits of $5,000 per year by being the only vendor selling bottled tap water at your town's Fourth of July celebration. When you go to city hall to apply for a vending permit for this year's celebration, the city clerk mentions that fifty new firms have received permits to sell tap water this year.
-What can you do to protect your economic profit in the short run?
(Short Answer)
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Suppose that the development of a new type of circuit lowers the costs of production in the microcomputer industry, which is perfectly competitive. The long-run effect will likely be
(Multiple Choice)
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A picture-frame company operates in a monopolistically competitive market. Its short-run equilibrium price is $80 and its ATC is $65. It sells 100 picture frames a week.Ignoring for now its long-run position, in the short run,
(Multiple Choice)
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A chewing gum monopoly can sell 400,000 packages of gum for $0.10 each. If it wants to sell 500,000 packages, its price must be
(Multiple Choice)
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Economists may hold many different views about the economy but on this they all agree: That price is always lower in a perfectly competitive market than in a monopoly market.
(True/False)
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Suppose your accountant told you that the $50,000 you made last year was the total revenue you earned minus both explicit and implicit costs. You would be pleased because that $50,000 represents your
(Multiple Choice)
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A monopoly's economic profit is protected by the lack of entry of new firms even in the long run.
(True/False)
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Perfect competition and monopolistic competition are similar in this one respect:
(Multiple Choice)
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Let's use the example from the text: The Nick Rudd Ice Company is a monopoly. Its goal, then, is to
(Multiple Choice)
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A monopolist earns $1,000,000 economic profit in the short run producing 25,000 units of a good. The marginal revenue of the 25,000th unit is $23 and the marginal cost is $30. What should the monopolist do?
(Multiple Choice)
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Why does a monopolist's total revenue eventually fall as it produces and sells more output?
(Essay)
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The rule for profit maximization is the same for a monopolist as for a perfectly competitive firm.
(True/False)
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