Exam 3: Part 1: Market Demand and Supply
Exam 1: Introducing the Economic Way of Thinking177 Questions
Exam 1: A: Appendix: Applying Graphs to Economics69 Questions
Exam 2: Production Possibilities,Opportunity Cost,and Economic Growth200 Questions
Exam 3: Part 1: Market Demand and Supply250 Questions
Exam 3: Part 2: Market Demand and Supply106 Questions
Exam 4: Markets in Action250 Questions
Exam 5: Price Elasticity of Demand177 Questions
Exam 6: Production Costs249 Questions
Exam 7: Perfect Competition222 Questions
Exam 8: Monopoly170 Questions
Exam 9: Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly161 Questions
Exam 10: Labor Markets and Income Distribution180 Questions
Exam 11: Gross Domestic Product202 Questions
Exam 12: Business Cycles and Unemployment194 Questions
Exam 13: Inflation127 Questions
Exam 14: Aggregate Demand and Supply188 Questions
Exam 14: A: Appendix: The Self-Correcting Aggregate Demand and Supply Model83 Questions
Exam 15: Fiscal Policy201 Questions
Exam 16: The Public Sector127 Questions
Exam 17: Federal Deficits,Surpluses,and the National Debt97 Questions
Exam 18: Money and the Federal Reserve System154 Questions
Exam 19: Money Creation246 Questions
Exam 20: Monetary Policy214 Questions
Exam 20: A: Appendix: Policy Disputes Using the Self-Correcting Aggregate Demand and Supply Model31 Questions
Exam 21: International Trade and Finance246 Questions
Exam 22: Economies in Transition104 Questions
Exam 23: Growth and the Less-Developed Countries116 Questions
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If consumer incomes go up and cars are a normal good,the effect on the demand for cars ceteris paribus,will be a(n):
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If people buy less chewing gum at every price when their incomes fall,then:
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Which of the following will increase the demand for motorcycles?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is most likely to increase the supply of corn?
(Multiple Choice)
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If there is an increase in income,which of the following is true?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following would most likely not cause market demand for a normal good to decline?
(Multiple Choice)
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Assuming gasoline and oil to be complementary goods,the effect on the oil market of an increase in the price of gasoline (other things being equal)would best be described as a(n):
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Other things being equal,the effects of an increase in the price of orange juice would best be represented by a(n):
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Exhibit 3-5 Supply for Tucker's Cola Data
-As shown in Exhibit 3-5,the price and quantity supplied by sellers of Tucker's Cola have a(n)____ relationship.

(Multiple Choice)
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The most plausible reason why changes in the price of cotton can cause shifts in the supply curve for tobacco is:
(Multiple Choice)
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Assume that a computer is a normal good.An increase in consumer income,other things being equal,would:
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is true if the price of coffee increases?
(Multiple Choice)
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Assuming that clothing is a normal good,an increase in consumer income,other things being equal,would:
(Multiple Choice)
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Exhibit 3-3 Demand curves
-Which of the graphs in Exhibit 3-3 depicts the effect of a decrease in the price of domestic cars on the demand for foreign cars?

(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose that X and Y are complementary goods.If the price of good X decreases,we can expect the:
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Consumers buy less of a good as its price increases because:
(Multiple Choice)
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