Exam 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice
Exam 1: Ten Principles of Economics439 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist617 Questions
Exam 3: Interdependence and the Gains From Trade527 Questions
Exam 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand697 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Application594 Questions
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Exam 7: Consumers, Producers, and the Efficiency of Markets549 Questions
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Exam 11: Public Goods and Common Resources433 Questions
Exam 12: The Design of the Tax System549 Questions
Exam 13: The Costs of Production420 Questions
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Exam 15: Monopoly637 Questions
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Exam 18: The Markets for the Factors of Production564 Questions
Exam 19: Earnings and Discrimination490 Questions
Exam 20: Income Inequality and Poverty455 Questions
Exam 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice431 Questions
Exam 22: Frontiers of Microeconomics440 Questions
Exam 23: Measuring a Nations Income520 Questions
Exam 24: Measuring the Cost of Living529 Questions
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Exam 28: Unemployment678 Questions
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Exam 33: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply562 Questions
Exam 34: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand508 Questions
Exam 35: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment491 Questions
Exam 36: Six Debates Over Macroeconomic Policy372 Questions
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Figure 21-2
The downwardsloping line on the figure represents a consumer's budget constraint.
-Refer to Figure 21-2. A consumer who chooses to spend all of her income could be at which point(s) on the figure?

(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 21-25
The figure pertains to a particular consumer. On the axes, X represents the quantity of good X and Y represents the quantity of good Y.
-Refer to Figure 21-25. Suppose the price of good X is $10, the price of good Y is $5, and the consumer's income is $210. Then the consumer's optimal choice is represented by a point on which curve?

(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 21-1
The downwardsloping line on the figure represents a consumer's budget constraint.
-Refer to Figure 21-1. If the price of a CD is $12, then the consumer's income amounts to

(Multiple Choice)
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A rational person can have a negatively-sloped labor supply curve.
(True/False)
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Which effect of a price change moves the consumer along the same indifference curve to a point with a new marginal rate of substitution?
(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 21-32
The figure shows three indifference curves and a budget constraint for a consumer named Hannah. When young, Hannah works and earns income. When old, she is retired and earns no income.
-Refer to Figure 21-32. Of the four labeled points, which is (are) affordable to Hannah?

(Short Answer)
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Suppose a consumer has an income of $800 per month and that she spends her entire income each month on beer and bratwurst. The price of a pint of beer is $5, and the price of a bratwurst is $4. Which of the following combinations of beers and bratwursts represents a point that would lie to the interior of the consumer's budget constraint?
(Multiple Choice)
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The labor supply curve may have a backward-bending portion if, at higher wages, the income effect is
(Multiple Choice)
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The indifference curves for perfect substitutes are straight lines.
(True/False)
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Figure 21-9
-Refer to Figure 21-9. If the price of good X is $15, what is the price of good Y?

(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 21-24
The figure shows three indifference curves and a budget constraint for a certain consumer named Steve.
-Refer to Figure 21-24. If Steve's income is $12.60, then the price of a pound of apples is

(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 21-25
The figure pertains to a particular consumer. On the axes, X represents the quantity of good X and Y represents the quantity of good Y.
-Refer to Figure 21-25. Suppose the price of good X is $8, the price of good Y is $10, and the consumer's income is $360. Then the consumer's optimal choice is represented by a point on which curve?

(Multiple Choice)
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Consider the indifference curve map and budget constraint for two goods, X and Y. Suppose the good on the horizontal axis, X, is normal. When the price of X increases, the substitution effect
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose that for Emily, DVDs and trips to the movie theater are perfect substitutes. Currently, Emily is spending all of her income on trips to the movie theater. If the price of DVDs doubles, the substitution effect will
(Multiple Choice)
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If a consumer experiences a decrease in income, the new budget constraint will have the same slope as the old budget constraint.
(True/False)
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When the indifference curve is tangent to the budget constraint,
(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 21-32
The figure shows three indifference curves and a budget constraint for a consumer named Hannah. When young, Hannah works and earns income. When old, she is retired and earns no income.
-Refer to Figure 21-32. How much income does Hannah earn when she is young?

(Short Answer)
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The marginal rate of substitution is the slope of the indifference curve.
(True/False)
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Figure 21-32
The figure shows three indifference curves and a budget constraint for a consumer named Hannah. When young, Hannah works and earns income. When old, she is retired and earns no income.
-Refer to Figure 21-32. Which of the four labeled points is Hannah's optimum?

(Short Answer)
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Ryan experiences an increase in his wages. The hours of labor that he supplies to the market would increase if
(Multiple Choice)
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