Exam 3: Economic Circumstances in Labor and Financial Markets
Exam 1: Introduction10 Questions
Exam 2: A Consumers Economic Circumstances24 Questions
Exam 3: Economic Circumstances in Labor and Financial Markets12 Questions
Exam 4: Tastes and Indifference Curves15 Questions
Exam 5: Different Types of Tastes18 Questions
Exam 6: Doing the Best We Can17 Questions
Exam 7: Income and Substitution Effects in Consumer Goods Markets22 Questions
Exam 8: Wealth and Substitution Effects in Labor and Capital Markets16 Questions
Exam 9: Demand for Goods and Supply of Labor and Capital22 Questions
Exam 10: Consumer Surplus and Deadweight Loss20 Questions
Exam 11: One Input and One Output: a Short-Run Producer Model29 Questions
Exam 12: Production With Multiple Inputs30 Questions
Exam 13: Production Decisions in the Short and Long Run24 Questions
Exam 14: Competitive Market Equilibrium18 Questions
Exam 15: The Invisible Hand and the First Welfare Theorem18 Questions
Exam 16: General Equilibrium21 Questions
Exam 17: Choice and Markets in the Presence of Risk18 Questions
Exam 18: Elasticities, Price-Distorting Policies, and Non-Price Rationing21 Questions
Exam 19: Distortionary Taxes and Subsidies26 Questions
Exam 20: Prices and Distortions Across Markets18 Questions
Exam 21: Externalities in Competitive Markets23 Questions
Exam 22: Asymmetric Information in Competitive Markets22 Questions
Exam 23: Monopoly32 Questions
Exam 24: Strategic Thinking and Game Theory34 Questions
Exam 25: Oligopoly19 Questions
Exam 26: Product Differentiation and Innovation in Markets13 Questions
Exam 27: Public Goods19 Questions
Exam 28: Governments and Politics17 Questions
Exam 29: What Is Good Challenges From Psychology and Philosophy20 Questions
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In the worker's leisure/consumption model,the wage is the same as the price of consumption.
Free
(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
In the typical leisure/consumption model,an increase in the wage is equivalent to a decrease in the price of the composite consumption good.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
True
An increase in the interest rate is an increase in the opportunity cost of consuming in the future.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
The opportunity cost of current consumption differs for borrowers and savers only if the interest rate for savers differs from the interest rate for borrowers.
(True/False)
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Write down the budget constraint equation as well as the choice set for a worker who has 100 possible hours of leisure per week and can earn a wage of $25 per hour.
(Essay)
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A bond will pay $10,000 to its owner in 5 years.If the relevant annual interest rate is 5%,what is the bond worth today (rounded to the nearest 100)?
a.
$9,500
b.
$7,800
c.
$6,600
d.
$1,900
e.
None of the above.
(Essay)
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Changes in interest rates cause the same rotations of intertemporal budget lines regardless of whether you are a borrower or a saver.
(True/False)
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A bond that promises to pay $X in 10 years must be worth less than $X now.
(True/False)
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Suppose a worker gets a weekly check equal to $1,000 from a risk-free investment,has 60 hours of weekly leisure that can be devoted to work and can earn a wage of $40 per hour.
a.Illustrate this worker's budget constraint,with weekly leisure hours on the horizontal and weekly consumption (in dollars)on the vertical.
b Illustrate what happens to this worker's budget constraint when the weekly investment check increases to $1,500.
c.Illustrate what happens to this worker's budget constraint when instead the wage increases to $50 per hour.
d.Suppose the worker can hire help at $20 per hour,and each hour of help adds a half an hour to his available leisure.Will the budget constraint described in (a)change?
(Essay)
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A decrease in a wage taxes causes the opportunity cost of leisure to increase.
(True/False)
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Since interest rates for borrowing are usually higher than interest rates for savings,the intertemporal budget constraint has an inward kink for individuals that earn income now and in the future.
(True/False)
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Progressive wage taxes cause worker leisure/consumption budgets (with leisure on the horizontal axis)to become steeper as leisure increases.
(True/False)
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