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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Suppose the baseball card industry is monopolistic. We know then that for the monopolist,
(Multiple Choice)
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Sue's bagel shop faces many local competitors and has recently begun an advertising campaign which
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The monopolist, unlike the perfectly competitive firm, continues to earn an economic profit in the long run because
(Multiple Choice)
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One reason why firms in monopolistically competitive markets earn zero profit in the long run is because
(Multiple Choice)
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We know that in the long run, perfectly competitive firms produce where MR = MC andend up making zero economic profit. The profit-maximizing output level for a monopolist is where
(Multiple Choice)
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According to Alfred Marshall, small firms produce a good more efficiently than a monopoly.
(True/False)
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Under which of the following conditions could the monopoly price be less than the price that would result in perfect competition? When there are
(Multiple Choice)
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If a firm is earning a normal profit, but zero economic profit, at the point where MR = MC, the firm should
(Multiple Choice)
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Tara runs the only one-hour photo lab for 300 miles around, in an isolated west Texas town. Her lab technician explains to Tara that she is not producing the level of output that would minimize her average total costs. The lab technician tells her that she should lower her price in order to increase her number ofcustomers. Tara rejects her technician's analysis. Why doesn't she take her technician's advice?
(Short Answer)
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The firm's demand curve in monopolistic competition slopes downward because
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-Sam's hamburger shop, represented by Exhibit K-1, is a monopolistic competitor

(Multiple Choice)
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In the long-run, profits will exist for firms in monopolistically competitive firms but not monopoly.
(True/False)
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Picture in your mind's eye the graph of a profit-maximizing monopolist. If its cost curves-both ATC and MC-shift upward while its demand curve remains unchanged, the monopolist will
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose your accountant told you that the economic profit you made last year was $50,000. You would be pleased because the $50,000 represents your total revenue minus
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-The firm in Exhibit K-9 produces in which type of market structure?

(Multiple Choice)
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Because its market share is insignificant, a perfectly competitive firm faces an inelastic demand curve.
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