Exam 11: Pure Competition in the Long Run
Exam 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices398 Questions
Exam 2: The Market System and the Circular Flow252 Questions
Exam 3: Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium339 Questions
Exam 4: Market Failures: Public Goods and Externalities235 Questions
Exam 5: Governments Role and Government Failure275 Questions
Exam 6: Elasticity255 Questions
Exam 7: Utility Maximization256 Questions
Exam 8: Behavioral Economics274 Questions
Exam 9: Businesses and the Costs of Production307 Questions
Exam 10: Pure Competition in the Short Run167 Questions
Exam 11: Pure Competition in the Long Run182 Questions
Exam 12: Pure Monopoly224 Questions
Exam 13: Monopolistic Competition194 Questions
Exam 14: Oligopoly and Strategic Behavior265 Questions
Exam 15: Technology, Rd, and Efficiency231 Questions
Exam 16: The Demand for Resources244 Questions
Exam 17: Wage Determination308 Questions
Exam 18: Rent, Interest, and Profit210 Questions
Exam 19: Natural Resource and Energy Economics290 Questions
Exam 20: Public Finance: Expenditures and Taxes232 Questions
Exam 21: Antitrust Policy and Regulation237 Questions
Exam 22: Agriculture: Economics and Policy217 Questions
Exam 23: Income Inequality, Poverty, and Discrimination272 Questions
Exam 24: Health Care240 Questions
Exam 25: Immigration197 Questions
Exam 26: International Trade241 Questions
Exam 27: The Balance of Payments, Exchange Rates, and Trade Deficits252 Questions
Exam 28: The Economics of Developing Countries249 Questions
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A patent is the legal right granted to a firm that allows it to
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If production is occurring where marginal cost exceeds price, the purely competitive firm will
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When a competitive firm sees losses because the product price falls below the minimum average cost of production at its current plant, it may decide to expand if there are economies of scale.
(True/False)
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The short-run supply curve of a purely competitive industry tends to be steeper than the long-run supply curve.
(True/False)
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Assume the market for ball bearings is purely competitive. Currently, each of the firms in this market is earning positive economic profits. In the long run, as adjustments occur in the industry, we can expect the market price of ball bearings to
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose that a competitive firm finds that in its short-run equilibrium situation, its marginal cost is higher than its average total cost. If things are not expected to change and there are constant returns to scale, then the firm will exit the industry in the long
run.
(True/False)
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If a purely competitive firm is facing a situation where the price of its product is lower than the average cost, then all of the following apply, except
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When new firms enter a purely competitive industry, the market supply curve will shift to the left.
(True/False)
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Resources are efficiently allocated when production occurs where
(Multiple Choice)
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When LCD televisions first came on the market, they sold for at least $1,000, and some for much more. Now many units can be purchased for under $400. These facts imply that
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Which of the following is an example of creative destruction?
(Multiple Choice)
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What happens in a decreasing-cost industry when some firms leave and the industry's output contracts?
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Producer surplus is the difference between the market price a producer receives for a product and the minimum price producers are willing to accept for a product.
(True/False)
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All of the following statements apply to a purely competitive market in the long run, except
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Which of the following is not a factor that automatically pushes firms in pure competition to earn only normal profits in the long run?
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If the representative firm in a purely competitive industry is in short-run equilibrium and, at its current output level, its marginal cost exceeds its average total cost, then we can conclude that
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