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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When entrepreneurs in competitive industries successfully innovate to lower production costs, it usually results in long-run economic profits for the firm.
(True/False)
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Which of the following is true concerning purely competitive industries?
(Multiple Choice)
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The costs of competition's creative destruction are often widespread, while the benefits often accrue to only a few.
(True/False)
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Suppose a purely competitive, increasing-cost industry is in long-run equilibrium. Now assume that a decrease in consumer demand occurs. After all resulting adjustments have been completed, the new equilibrium price
(Multiple Choice)
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An industry is producing at the least-cost rate of production when
(Multiple Choice)
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In a purely competitive industry, an optimal allocation of scarce resources occurs when
(Multiple Choice)
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Under what conditions would an increase in demand lead to a lower long-run equilibrium price?
(Multiple Choice)
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If the price of bottled water is $2 and the marginal cost of producing it is $2.50,
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following conditions is true for a purely competitive firm in long-run equilibrium?
(Multiple Choice)
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When a profit-maximizing competitive firm decides to produce at a loss because its price is below average cost but above average variable cost, that is a long-run decision.
(True/False)
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An industry that has increasing returns to scale and fixed factor prices will have a long-run supply curve that is
(Multiple Choice)
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Resources are efficiently allocated when production occurs at that output level where price
(Multiple Choice)
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The long-run supply curve under pure competition is derived by observing what happens to market price and quantity when market
(Multiple Choice)
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Assume that the market for soybeans is purely competitive. Currently, firms growing soybeans are earning positive economic profits. In the long run, we can expect
(Multiple Choice)
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