Exam 19: Geometrical Analysis of Consumer Equilibrium
Exam 1: The Central Concepts of Economics125 Questions
Exam 2: The Modern Mixed Economy80 Questions
Exam 3: Basic Elements of Supply and Demand Part85 Questions
Exam 4: Supply and Demand: Elasticity and Applications79 Questions
Exam 5: Demand and Consumer Behavior74 Questions
Exam 6: Production and Business Organization79 Questions
Exam 7: Analysis of Costs80 Questions
Exam 8: Analysis of Perfectly Competitive Markets80 Questions
Exam 9: Imperfect Competition and Monopoly80 Questions
Exam 10: Competition Among the Few80 Questions
Exam 11: Economics of Uncertainty 60 Questions
Exam 12: The Labor Market80 Questions
Exam 13: Land, Natural Resources, and the Environment80 Questions
Exam 14: Capital, Interest, and Profits Part Four: Applications of Economic Principles50 Questions
Exam 15: Government Taxation and Expenditure71 Questions
Exam 16: Efficiency Vsequality: The Big Trade-Off79 Questions
Exam 17: International Trade74 Questions
Exam 18: Overview of Macroeconomics80 Questions
Exam 19: Geometrical Analysis of Consumer Equilibrium40 Questions
Exam 20: Production Cost Theory and Decisions of the Firm30 Questions
Select questions type
The slope of the budget line equals the price ratio of the two goods.
(True/False)
4.7/5
(34)
A consumer's indifference curves will be influenced by all the following except:
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(39)
Use the following to answer questions :
Figure 5A-1
-Refer to Figure 5A-1.If X costs $6 per unit and Y costs $5 per unit, what is the income of this household?

(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(36)
The scarcer the good, the greater its relative substitution value.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(40)
The budget line shifts inward in a parallel way when you get less income.
(True/False)
5.0/5
(36)
Use the following to answer questions :
Figure 5A-2
-In Figure 5A-2, the shift from the budget line AB to the new budget line DB was caused by an increase in the price of Y.

(True/False)
4.7/5
(29)
Use the following to answer questions :
Figure 5A-1
-Refer to Figure 5A-1.What is the slope of the budget constraint?

(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(34)
Increasing all prices and income in exactly the same proportion:
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(34)
In consumer equilibrium, the consumer's substitution ratio for two goods equals the price ratio of the two goods.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(39)
In the figure below, if the consumer is currently at point A, with the given budget line and indifference curve, she should: 

(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(36)
An indifference curve is bowed out like the production possibility frontier.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(35)
Use the following to answer questions :
Figure 5A-2
-In Figure 5A-2, starting from the budget constraint AC, if both income and prices are doubled, the household's budget constraint would shift out to EF, and the household could attain a utility level of U(4).

(True/False)
4.9/5
(44)
The slope of the indifference curve measures the terms on which the consumer would be willing to trade one good for another.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(35)
An indifference curve represents consumption bundles among which the consumer is indifferent.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(34)
Indifference curves are generally convex to the origin because of:
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(24)
Geometrically, the consumer is at equilibrium where the slope of the budget line is exactly equal to the slope of the indifference curve.
(True/False)
4.7/5
(33)
Use the following to answer questions :
Figure 5A-2
-The slope of the budget line BD in Figure 5A-2 is -2.

(True/False)
4.8/5
(26)
Showing 21 - 40 of 40
Filters
- Essay(0)
- Multiple Choice(0)
- Short Answer(0)
- True False(0)
- Matching(0)