Exam 8: Wealth and Substitution Effects in Labor and Capital 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 a model of consumption and leisure,a drop in the wage will cause workers to work less if tastes are quasilinear in leisure.
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True
When tastes over current and future consumption are characterized by Cobb-Douglas utility functions,a borrower who has no income now and all income in the future will borrow more when the interest rate falls.
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Correct Answer:
True
When tastes over current and future consumption take the Cobb-Douglas form,interest rates have no impact on savings when income is earned in the current period but not in the future.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
True
When the elasticity of substitution in the constant elasticity of substitution utility function lies above 1,an increase in the interest rate will cause a saver to save less.
(True/False)
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A friend is currently earning income but does not expect to earn income in the future.When the interest rate rose,I observed him saving less.From this,I can conclude that current consumption is an inferior good for my friend.
(True/False)
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In a model with leisure hours and a composite consumption good,you cannot tell whether workers will work more or less if tastes are quasilinear in the consumption good.
(True/False)
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In the U.S.,everyone has to pay social security taxes on labor income until pre-tax income reaches a certain amount after which no additional taxes are due.Consider the case of workers A,B and C who have 60 hours of leisure per week and who earn an hourly wage of $40.Suppose the social security tax is 50% up to a pre-tax weekly income of $1,200 and then falls to zero for any income above $1,200 per week.Assume tastes are homothetic.
a.Worker A is observed to work 40 hours per week under this tax system.Is he working more or less than he would if the system were abolished?
b.Worker B is observed to work 30 hours a week under this tax system.Is he working more or less than he would if the system were abolished?
c.Worker C is observed to work 20 hours per week under this system.Is he working more or less than he would if the system were abolished?
d.Could any of the three workers above share exactly the same tastes?
e.For which of these workers is there no deadweight loss from the tax?
(Essay)
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If leisure is an inferior good,then an increase in wages will cause workers to work more.
(True/False)
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For decreases in wage taxes,substitution effects put negative pressure on tax revenues while wealth effects put positive pressure on tax revenues.
(True/False)
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Assuming no kinks in indifference curves and assuming our usual assumptions about tastes hold,someone who currently neither saves nor borrows will begin to borrow when the interest rate falls.
(True/False)
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In a model of consumption and leisure,a drop in the wage will cause workers to work more if tastes are quasilinear in consumption.
(True/False)
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Suppose you know I are only about consumption this year and consumption next year.Suppose also that I have an income this year but do not expect to have an income next year.Explain your answers.
a.You notice that I save more after the interest rate falls.Can you tell whether "consumption now" is a normal,inferior or Giffen good?
b.Suppose I also received an unexpected raise at work and you overhear me say: "Cool,I am even Steven.Now that I have my raise,I am just as happy as I was before the interest rate fell and I did not yet have a raise." Without knowing anything more,can you tell whether I consume more or less next year than I would have consumed had neither of the two changes happened?
(Essay)
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As long as both current and future consumption are normal goods,a decrease in the interest rate will result in a drop in savings.
(True/False)
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If you earn income now and expect to live off savings in the future,then a raise now will cause you to save more so long as consumption -- now and in the future -- is a normal good.
(True/False)
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The more substitutable current consumption is with future consumption,the more likely it is that an increase in the interest rate will cause an increase in savings.
(True/False)
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Taxing savings in ways that lower the interest rate received by savers will lower savings.
(True/False)
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