Deck 8: Output, Price, and Profit: The Importance of Marginal Analysis

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Question
A firm's total profit is the difference between its sales and what it pays out in costs.
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Question
Marginal, average, and total figures are bound together.If any two are known, the third can be calculated.
Question
A firm's total revenue is simply the price of its product multiplied by the quantity sold.
Question
It can be shown that average revenue and price are always equal.
Question
Accounting profit is usually larger than economic profit.
Question
Economists assume that business firms have many goals, and profit maximization is just one of them.
Question
Total revenue is equal to quantity multiplied by average revenue.
Question
Average revenue is slightly higher than price.
Question
Total revenue cannot be derived from the demand curve or a demand schedule.
Question
Economists and accountants have very different definitions of profit.
Question
Economists assume that business firms attempt to maximize their profits.
Question
Economists and accountants use the same definition of profit.
Question
The addition to total revenue resulting from one more unit of output is called marginal revenue.
Question
Accounting profit is usually smaller than economic profit.
Question
A small business owner who is earning a positive economic profit, no matter how small, is doing better than if she sold her business and went to work for another firm.
Question
A firm that is earning zero economic profit should go out of business.
Question
Price and output decisions are two aspects of the same choice.
Question
Marginal revenue equals the change in total revenue that is earned by selling one more unit of output.
Question
Once a firm has selected a price for its product, quantity is decided by consumers and their demand curves.
Question
The average revenue curve can also be described as the demand curve.
Question
Profits will be maximized when the slope of the total revenue curve and the slope of the total cost curve are equal.
Question
If the average cost of a product is $10 per unit and the price is $5, the firm is losing money.
Question
Total profit is represented by the vertical distance between a total revenue curve and a total cost curve.
Question
Marginal revenue is the addition to total revenue resulting from the addition of one unit to total output.
Question
If marginal cost of an additional unit of output is greater than average cost, then average cost will rise.
Question
Average cost equals total cost multiplied by the number of units of output.
Question
Given total cost and the quantity of output, marginal cost and average cost can be determined.
Question
Profits will be maximized when the slope of the total revenue curve and the slope of the total cost curve equal zero.
Question
Marginal cost is defined by the slope of the total revenue curve.
Question
Average cost can be thought of as the cost per unit.
Question
If total profit is at a maximum, then average profit is zero.
Question
If average cost is falling, then marginal cost must be falling.
Question
A firm that sells at a price below average cost is losing money.
Question
Total cost equals average cost multiplied by the quantity of output.
Question
Marginal profit is the slope of the total profit curve.
Question
Average cost is the cost of producing the next unit.
Question
Marginal cost curves and average cost curves are both purely upward sloping.
Question
If marginal cost is less than average cost, average cost must fall when more units are produced.
Question
If marginal cost is rising, then average cost must be rising.
Question
A graph of total profits is always likely to be positively sloped throughout its length.
Question
Marginal profit is the additional profit that accrues to the firm when the output rises by one unit.
Question
Marginal profit equals the difference between marginal revenue and marginal cost.
Question
A firm should keep producing output as long as the marginal profit is greater than zero, no matter how small it is.
Question
An optimal level of output is one at which marginal profit > 0.
Question
If marginal profit is zero, then total profit is at a maximum.
Question
If total profit is maximized, then marginal cost must equal marginal revenue.
Question
A firm should use marginal analysis when making a price-output decision.
Question
Profit is maximized at the output at which marginal revenue equals marginal cost.
Question
A firm that decides to make a price cut assumes that marginal profit is negative.
Question
If the marginal profit of the next unit is negative, the firm should produce more output in order to generate greater profit.
Question
Marginal profit equals the difference between marginal revenue and average cost.
Question
If a firm's marginal profit is negative, it should reduce its output level.
Question
A firm is generally more interested in marginal profits than in total profits.
Question
The rule of equating marginal benefit with marginal cost is proper for economics, but it does not describe the way in which people make non-economic decisions.
Question
Profit is maximized at the output at which marginal revenue exceeds marginal cost by the greatest margin.
Question
All business firms should consider their fixed costs in determining the prices they set.
Question
If marginal profit is zero, then average profit is at a maximum.
Question
When a firm's fixed costs increase it should raise its prices in order to maximize profits.
Question
Net benefit is equal to total benefit minus marginal cost.
Question
Profit maximization occurs when MC = MR.
Question
In arriving at the quantity of output and price of its product, a company

A) chooses either output or price, and consumer demand determines the other.
B) has no control over either quantity or price.
C) makes two decisions by setting both optimal output and optimal price.
D) generally leaves both quantity and price decisions to consumers.
Question
Maureen left her teaching job, which paid $30,000 per year, and invested $20,000 of her retirement fund (which was earning 10 percent interest) in a new real estate business.Her accountant predicted a $60,000 revenue the first year.Her husband, an economist, forecast her profit to be

A) $10,000.
B) $28,000.
C) $32,000.
D) $60,000.
Question
Firms can make decisions using marginal analysis even if they do not know the shape of a demand curve.
Question
Marginal analysis is useful in economics, but not in other areas of life.
Question
Any change in a firm's fixed costs will change its profit-maximizing level of output.
Question
Marginal, average, and total figures are unrelated.
Question
Price and quantity decisions made by a company have vital influences on

A) the firm's labor requirements.
B) consumer response to the product.
C) future success of the company.
D) All of the above are correct.
Question
If a firm's average cost is currently $100, and the marginal cost is $95, then the average cost is currently falling.
Question
Decision making that seeks only solutions that are acceptable is called

A) optimizing.
B) satisficing.
C) benchmarking.
D) maximizing.
Question
In the case study discussed in the chapter, the electronics firm was losing money by selling its calculators at a price that was below average cost.
Question
Firms need to know the shape of a demand curve to use marginal analysis.
Question
The goal of the business firm is maximization of ____, and the goal of the consumer is maximization of ____.

A) total sales; income
B) total profit; utility
C) total output; utility
D) total sales; utility
Question
Profit maximization is

A) the only motive of any firm's management.
B) a behavioral assumption to simplify analysis.
C) the same as satisficing.
D) a literal description of a firm's behavior.
Question
In the case study discussed in the chapter, the electronics firm was actually enhancing its profits by selling calculators at a price that was below average cost.
Question
A firm can choose a quantity of output, and the price is then determined by

A) the government.
B) the supply schedule.
C) consumers' demand.
D) the average cost.
Question
Economists use a model that is a literal description of business' behavior.
Question
Management gets two numbers (price and quantity) from one decision because

A) the marginal utility of goods is fixed.
B) producers use both technical and financial information.
C) the demand curve consists of price and quantity pairs.
D) the average cost curve has only one low point.
Question
The assumption that firms attempt to maximize profits will yield good predictions even if firms sometimes pursue other goals.
Question
Sally leaves her $24,000 secretarial position with a company and invests her savings of $15,000 (on which she was earning 6 percent interest) in her own Ready Sec agency.After expenses, her net income was $28,900.Her economic profit was

A) $4,900.
B) $4,000.
C) $28,900.
D) -$10,100.
Question
Ben quit his job as an economics professor to become a golf professional.He gave up his salary ($40,000) and invested his retirement fund of $50,000 (which was earning 10 percent interest) in this venture.After all expenses, his net winnings (profit) were $45,000.Ben's economic profits were

A) $45,000.
B) $5,000.
C) $2,000.
D) zero.
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Deck 8: Output, Price, and Profit: The Importance of Marginal Analysis
1
A firm's total profit is the difference between its sales and what it pays out in costs.
True
2
Marginal, average, and total figures are bound together.If any two are known, the third can be calculated.
True
3
A firm's total revenue is simply the price of its product multiplied by the quantity sold.
True
4
It can be shown that average revenue and price are always equal.
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5
Accounting profit is usually larger than economic profit.
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6
Economists assume that business firms have many goals, and profit maximization is just one of them.
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7
Total revenue is equal to quantity multiplied by average revenue.
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8
Average revenue is slightly higher than price.
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9
Total revenue cannot be derived from the demand curve or a demand schedule.
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10
Economists and accountants have very different definitions of profit.
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11
Economists assume that business firms attempt to maximize their profits.
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12
Economists and accountants use the same definition of profit.
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13
The addition to total revenue resulting from one more unit of output is called marginal revenue.
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14
Accounting profit is usually smaller than economic profit.
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15
A small business owner who is earning a positive economic profit, no matter how small, is doing better than if she sold her business and went to work for another firm.
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16
A firm that is earning zero economic profit should go out of business.
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17
Price and output decisions are two aspects of the same choice.
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18
Marginal revenue equals the change in total revenue that is earned by selling one more unit of output.
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19
Once a firm has selected a price for its product, quantity is decided by consumers and their demand curves.
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20
The average revenue curve can also be described as the demand curve.
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21
Profits will be maximized when the slope of the total revenue curve and the slope of the total cost curve are equal.
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22
If the average cost of a product is $10 per unit and the price is $5, the firm is losing money.
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23
Total profit is represented by the vertical distance between a total revenue curve and a total cost curve.
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24
Marginal revenue is the addition to total revenue resulting from the addition of one unit to total output.
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25
If marginal cost of an additional unit of output is greater than average cost, then average cost will rise.
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26
Average cost equals total cost multiplied by the number of units of output.
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27
Given total cost and the quantity of output, marginal cost and average cost can be determined.
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28
Profits will be maximized when the slope of the total revenue curve and the slope of the total cost curve equal zero.
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29
Marginal cost is defined by the slope of the total revenue curve.
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30
Average cost can be thought of as the cost per unit.
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31
If total profit is at a maximum, then average profit is zero.
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32
If average cost is falling, then marginal cost must be falling.
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33
A firm that sells at a price below average cost is losing money.
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34
Total cost equals average cost multiplied by the quantity of output.
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35
Marginal profit is the slope of the total profit curve.
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36
Average cost is the cost of producing the next unit.
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37
Marginal cost curves and average cost curves are both purely upward sloping.
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38
If marginal cost is less than average cost, average cost must fall when more units are produced.
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39
If marginal cost is rising, then average cost must be rising.
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40
A graph of total profits is always likely to be positively sloped throughout its length.
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41
Marginal profit is the additional profit that accrues to the firm when the output rises by one unit.
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42
Marginal profit equals the difference between marginal revenue and marginal cost.
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43
A firm should keep producing output as long as the marginal profit is greater than zero, no matter how small it is.
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44
An optimal level of output is one at which marginal profit > 0.
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45
If marginal profit is zero, then total profit is at a maximum.
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46
If total profit is maximized, then marginal cost must equal marginal revenue.
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47
A firm should use marginal analysis when making a price-output decision.
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48
Profit is maximized at the output at which marginal revenue equals marginal cost.
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49
A firm that decides to make a price cut assumes that marginal profit is negative.
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50
If the marginal profit of the next unit is negative, the firm should produce more output in order to generate greater profit.
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51
Marginal profit equals the difference between marginal revenue and average cost.
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52
If a firm's marginal profit is negative, it should reduce its output level.
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53
A firm is generally more interested in marginal profits than in total profits.
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54
The rule of equating marginal benefit with marginal cost is proper for economics, but it does not describe the way in which people make non-economic decisions.
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55
Profit is maximized at the output at which marginal revenue exceeds marginal cost by the greatest margin.
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56
All business firms should consider their fixed costs in determining the prices they set.
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57
If marginal profit is zero, then average profit is at a maximum.
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58
When a firm's fixed costs increase it should raise its prices in order to maximize profits.
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59
Net benefit is equal to total benefit minus marginal cost.
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60
Profit maximization occurs when MC = MR.
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61
In arriving at the quantity of output and price of its product, a company

A) chooses either output or price, and consumer demand determines the other.
B) has no control over either quantity or price.
C) makes two decisions by setting both optimal output and optimal price.
D) generally leaves both quantity and price decisions to consumers.
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62
Maureen left her teaching job, which paid $30,000 per year, and invested $20,000 of her retirement fund (which was earning 10 percent interest) in a new real estate business.Her accountant predicted a $60,000 revenue the first year.Her husband, an economist, forecast her profit to be

A) $10,000.
B) $28,000.
C) $32,000.
D) $60,000.
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k this deck
63
Firms can make decisions using marginal analysis even if they do not know the shape of a demand curve.
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k this deck
64
Marginal analysis is useful in economics, but not in other areas of life.
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k this deck
65
Any change in a firm's fixed costs will change its profit-maximizing level of output.
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k this deck
66
Marginal, average, and total figures are unrelated.
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k this deck
67
Price and quantity decisions made by a company have vital influences on

A) the firm's labor requirements.
B) consumer response to the product.
C) future success of the company.
D) All of the above are correct.
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68
If a firm's average cost is currently $100, and the marginal cost is $95, then the average cost is currently falling.
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69
Decision making that seeks only solutions that are acceptable is called

A) optimizing.
B) satisficing.
C) benchmarking.
D) maximizing.
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70
In the case study discussed in the chapter, the electronics firm was losing money by selling its calculators at a price that was below average cost.
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71
Firms need to know the shape of a demand curve to use marginal analysis.
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72
The goal of the business firm is maximization of ____, and the goal of the consumer is maximization of ____.

A) total sales; income
B) total profit; utility
C) total output; utility
D) total sales; utility
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73
Profit maximization is

A) the only motive of any firm's management.
B) a behavioral assumption to simplify analysis.
C) the same as satisficing.
D) a literal description of a firm's behavior.
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k this deck
74
In the case study discussed in the chapter, the electronics firm was actually enhancing its profits by selling calculators at a price that was below average cost.
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Unlock for access to all 189 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
75
A firm can choose a quantity of output, and the price is then determined by

A) the government.
B) the supply schedule.
C) consumers' demand.
D) the average cost.
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Unlock for access to all 189 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Economists use a model that is a literal description of business' behavior.
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k this deck
77
Management gets two numbers (price and quantity) from one decision because

A) the marginal utility of goods is fixed.
B) producers use both technical and financial information.
C) the demand curve consists of price and quantity pairs.
D) the average cost curve has only one low point.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 189 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
The assumption that firms attempt to maximize profits will yield good predictions even if firms sometimes pursue other goals.
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Unlock for access to all 189 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Sally leaves her $24,000 secretarial position with a company and invests her savings of $15,000 (on which she was earning 6 percent interest) in her own Ready Sec agency.After expenses, her net income was $28,900.Her economic profit was

A) $4,900.
B) $4,000.
C) $28,900.
D) -$10,100.
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k this deck
80
Ben quit his job as an economics professor to become a golf professional.He gave up his salary ($40,000) and invested his retirement fund of $50,000 (which was earning 10 percent interest) in this venture.After all expenses, his net winnings (profit) were $45,000.Ben's economic profits were

A) $45,000.
B) $5,000.
C) $2,000.
D) zero.
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