Deck 9: Demand for Goods and Supply of Labor and Capital

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Question
Holding all prices fixed, income-demand curves relate changes in exogenous income to changes in the quantity of a good demanded.
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Question
Since income and substitution effects point in the same direction for normal goods, the leisure demand curve will be shallower if leisure is a normal good than if leisure is an inferior good.
Question
If future consumption is a normal good, the interest rate/borrowing relationship cannot be upward sloping.
Question
The empirically observed backward-bending labor supply curve cannot arise from homothetic tastes.
Question
Leisure being an inferior good is necessary but not sufficient for labor supply to slope up.
Question
A downward sloping income-demand curve indicates that the good is a necessity.
Question
Assuming the same sized substitution effect, normal goods have steeper cross-price demand curves than inferior goods.
Question
Saving is equivalent to withdrawing financial capital from the market.
Question
Leisure being a normal good is neither necessary nor sufficient for labor supply to slope up.
Question
If a good is quasilinear, its own-price demand curve is vertical.
Question
The cross-price demand curve for Cobb-Douglas tastes is perfectly vertical.
Question
Suppose that utility over consumption and leisure takes the constant elasticity of substitution form Suppose that utility over consumption and leisure takes the constant elasticity of substitution form   .If   falls between 0 and -1, then the labor supply curve is backward bending.<div style=padding-top: 35px> .If Suppose that utility over consumption and leisure takes the constant elasticity of substitution form   .If   falls between 0 and -1, then the labor supply curve is backward bending.<div style=padding-top: 35px> falls between 0 and -1, then the labor supply curve is backward bending.
Question
If tastes are homothetic in leisure and consumption, labor supply curves slope up.
Question
For the same sized substitution effect, own-price demand curves for inferior goods are steeper than own price demand curves for normal goods.
Question
An increase in the price of good 2 will cause the demand curve for good 1 to shift out.
Question
Suppose your tastes over consumption and leisure have constant elasticity of substitution.I observe that, when your wage went up, you continued to work the same number of hours.From this, I can conclude that you have Cobb-Douglas tastes.
Question
Unless a good is a Giffen good, the demand curve shifts to the right as income rises.
Question
When tastes are quasilinear in leisure, the labor supply curve is vertical.
Question
In order for someone to switch from borrowing to saving when the interest rate falls, it must be that current consumption is an inferior good.
Question
Goods like exclusive designer clothes carry with them prestige value linked to their price.As a result, some people demand more of such goods as the price increases.For those people, such goods are Giffen goods.
Question
Suppose your utility function is given by Suppose your utility function is given by   .What is your demand function for   ?<div style=padding-top: 35px> .What is your demand function for Suppose your utility function is given by   .What is your demand function for   ?<div style=padding-top: 35px> ?
Question
Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above <div style=padding-top: 35px> .Your demand for <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above <div style=padding-top: 35px> is

A) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above <div style=padding-top: 35px> .
B) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above <div style=padding-top: 35px> .
C) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above <div style=padding-top: 35px>
D) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above <div style=padding-top: 35px>
E)None of the above
Question
Consider a consumer who consumes only Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> and Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> .The price of Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> falls.
a.On a graph with Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> on the horizontal and Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I.
b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> assuming that both goods are normal.
c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> is upward or downward sloping?
d.Suppose Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> is leisure hours and Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?<div style=padding-top: 35px> is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)?
e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?
Question
Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   <div style=padding-top: 35px> .Your demand function for <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   <div style=padding-top: 35px> is

A) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   <div style=padding-top: 35px> .
B) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   <div style=padding-top: 35px> .
C) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   <div style=padding-top: 35px>
D) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   <div style=padding-top: 35px>
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Deck 9: Demand for Goods and Supply of Labor and Capital
1
Holding all prices fixed, income-demand curves relate changes in exogenous income to changes in the quantity of a good demanded.
True
2
Since income and substitution effects point in the same direction for normal goods, the leisure demand curve will be shallower if leisure is a normal good than if leisure is an inferior good.
False
3
If future consumption is a normal good, the interest rate/borrowing relationship cannot be upward sloping.
True
4
The empirically observed backward-bending labor supply curve cannot arise from homothetic tastes.
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5
Leisure being an inferior good is necessary but not sufficient for labor supply to slope up.
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6
A downward sloping income-demand curve indicates that the good is a necessity.
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7
Assuming the same sized substitution effect, normal goods have steeper cross-price demand curves than inferior goods.
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8
Saving is equivalent to withdrawing financial capital from the market.
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9
Leisure being a normal good is neither necessary nor sufficient for labor supply to slope up.
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10
If a good is quasilinear, its own-price demand curve is vertical.
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11
The cross-price demand curve for Cobb-Douglas tastes is perfectly vertical.
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12
Suppose that utility over consumption and leisure takes the constant elasticity of substitution form Suppose that utility over consumption and leisure takes the constant elasticity of substitution form   .If   falls between 0 and -1, then the labor supply curve is backward bending. .If Suppose that utility over consumption and leisure takes the constant elasticity of substitution form   .If   falls between 0 and -1, then the labor supply curve is backward bending. falls between 0 and -1, then the labor supply curve is backward bending.
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13
If tastes are homothetic in leisure and consumption, labor supply curves slope up.
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14
For the same sized substitution effect, own-price demand curves for inferior goods are steeper than own price demand curves for normal goods.
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15
An increase in the price of good 2 will cause the demand curve for good 1 to shift out.
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16
Suppose your tastes over consumption and leisure have constant elasticity of substitution.I observe that, when your wage went up, you continued to work the same number of hours.From this, I can conclude that you have Cobb-Douglas tastes.
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17
Unless a good is a Giffen good, the demand curve shifts to the right as income rises.
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18
When tastes are quasilinear in leisure, the labor supply curve is vertical.
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19
In order for someone to switch from borrowing to saving when the interest rate falls, it must be that current consumption is an inferior good.
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20
Goods like exclusive designer clothes carry with them prestige value linked to their price.As a result, some people demand more of such goods as the price increases.For those people, such goods are Giffen goods.
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21
Suppose your utility function is given by Suppose your utility function is given by   .What is your demand function for   ? .What is your demand function for Suppose your utility function is given by   .What is your demand function for   ? ?
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22
Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above .Your demand for <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above is

A) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above .
B) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above .
C) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above
D) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   E)None of the above
E)None of the above
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23
Consider a consumer who consumes only Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? and Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? .The price of Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? falls.
a.On a graph with Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? on the horizontal and Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I.
b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? assuming that both goods are normal.
c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? is upward or downward sloping?
d.Suppose Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? is leisure hours and Consider a consumer who consumes only   and   .The price of   falls. a.On a graph with   on the horizontal and   on the vertical axis, illustrate the change in this consumer's budget constraint assuming exogenous income I. b.Illustrate income and substitution effects for   assuming that both goods are normal. c.Can you tell whether the cross-price demand curve for   is upward or downward sloping? d.Suppose   is leisure hours and   is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)? e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not? is a composite consumption good.Consider an increase in the wage assuming a fixed endowment of leisure (and no exogenous source of income).How is your graph similar and how is it different from what you graphed in (a) through (c)?
e.Is the leisure-demand curve a cross-price demand curve? Why or why not?
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24
Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   .Your demand function for <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   is

A) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   .
B) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)   .
C) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)
D) <strong>Suppose your tastes can be represented by the utility function   .Your demand function for   is</strong> A)   . B)   . C)   D)
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