微观经济学试题英文版
英文微观经济学试题及答案
英文微观经济学试题及答案一、选择题(每题2分,共20分)1. Which of the following is not a characteristic of a perfectly competitive market?A. Many buyers and sellersB. Homogeneous productsC. Free entry and exitD. Monopoly powerAnswer: D2. The law of diminishing returns states that:A. The total product of labor increases as more labor is addedB. The marginal product of labor eventually decreases as more labor is addedC. The average product of labor is always higher than the marginal productD. The marginal product of labor is always higher than the average productAnswer: B3. In the short run, a firm in a perfectly competitive market will shut down if:A. Total revenue is greater than total variable costB. Total revenue is less than total costC. Total revenue is less than total variable costD. Total revenue is less than average total costAnswer: C4. The demand for a good is likely to be more elastic when:A. The good has many close substitutesB. The good is a luxury itemC. The good is a necessityD. The good represents a small proportion of consumer's incomeAnswer: A5. The consumer surplus is the difference between:A. The maximum price a consumer is willing to pay and the market priceB. The market price and the minimum price a consumer is willing to payC. The maximum price a consumer is willing to pay and the minimum price a consumer is willing to payD. The minimum price a consumer is willing to pay and the market priceAnswer: A...(此处省略其他选择题)二、简答题(每题10分,共30分)1. Explain the concept of price elasticity of demand and itsdeterminants.Answer: Price elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good to a change in its price. It is calculated as the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price. The determinants of price elasticity include the availability of substitutes, the proportion of income spent on the good, the necessity of the good, and the time period over which the demand is being considered.2. What is the difference between a normal good and aninferior good?Answer: A normal good is a good for which the demand increases as income increases, while the demand for aninferior good decreases as income increases. This is because normal goods are typically considered desirable or of higher quality, while inferior goods are seen as lower quality substitutes that consumers prefer to avoid as their income increases.3. Define the law of supply and give an example.Answer: The law of supply states that, all else being equal, the quantity supplied of a good will increase as the price of the good increases, and decrease as the price of the good decreases. An example of this would be the supply of oil; if the price of oil rises, producers are more likely to increase production and supply more oil to the market.三、计算题(每题25分,共50分)1. A firm has the following total cost function: TC = 0.5Q^2 - 4Q + 100. Calculate the firm's average total cost (ATC) and marginal cost (MC) at the quantity level of Q = 50.Answer:To find the average total cost (ATC), we divide the total cost (TC) by the quantity (Q):\[ ATC = \frac{TC}{Q} = \frac{0.5Q^2 - 4Q + 100}{Q} \]At Q = 50:\[ ATC = \frac{0.5(50)^2 - 4(50) + 100}{50} = \frac{1250}{50} = 25 \]The marginal cost (MC) is the derivative of the total cost function with respect to quantity:\[ MC = \frac{dTC}{dQ} = 0.5 \times 2Q - 4 \]At Q = 50:\[ MC = 0.5 \times 2 \times 50 - 4 = 50 - 4 = 46 \]2. A monopolist faces the demand function P = 100 - 2Q and has a total cost function TC = 10Q. Calculate the profit-maximizing level of output and the corresponding price.Answer:First, calculate the marginal revenue (MR) by taking the derivative of the total revenue (TR) with respect to Q. TR is P*Q, so:\[ TR = (100 -。
微观经济学练习题与答案英文版
Chapter 01Thinking Like an Economist Multiple Choice Questions1. Economics is best defined as the study of:A. prices and quantities.B. inflation and interest rates.C. how people make choices under the conditions of scarcity and the results of those choices.D. wages and incomes.2. Economic questions always deal with:A. financial matters.B. political matters.C. insufficient resources.D. choice in the face of limited resources.3. The range of topics or issues that fit within the definition of economics is:A. limited to market activities, e.g., buying soap.B. limited to individuals and firms.C. extremely wide, requiring only the ideas of choice and scarcity.D. very limited.4. The central concern of economics is:A. poverty.B. scarcity.C. wealth accumulation.D. overconsumption.5. The scarcity principle indicates that:A. no matter how much one has, it is never enough.B. compared to 100 years ago, individuals have less time today.C. with limited resources, having more of "this" means having less of "that."D. because tradeoffs must be made, resources are therefore scarce.6. The logical implication of the scarcity principle is that:A. one will never be satisfied with what one has.B. as wealth increases, making choices becomes less necessary.C. as wealth decreases, making choices becomes less necessary.D. choices must be made.7. If all the world's resources were to magically increase a hundredfold, then:A. the scarcity principle would still govern behavior.B. economics would no longer be relevant.C. the scarcity principle would disappear.D. tradeoffs would become unnecessary.8. The principle of scarcity applies to:A. the poor exclusively.B. all consumers.C. all firms.D. everyone—consumers, firms, governments, and nations.9. At the very least, Joe Average and Bill Gates are both identically limited by:A. their wealth.B. the 24 hours that comprise a day.C. their knowledge.D. their influence.10. Forest is a mountain man living in complete isolation in Montana. He is completely self-sufficient through hunting, fishing, and farming. He has not been in the city to buy anything in five years. One can infer:A. the scarcity principle does not apply to Forest.B. Forest is not required to make choices.C. the scarcity principle still applies because more hunting means less fishing and farming.D. Forest is very satisfied.11. The scarcity principle applies to:A. all decisions.B. only market decisions, e.g., buying a car.C. only non-market decisions, e.g., watching a sunset.D. only the poor.12. Chris has a one-hour break between classes every Wednesday. Chris can either stay at the library and study or go to the gym and work out. The decision Chris must make is:A. not an economic problem because neither one costs money.B. not an economic problem because it's an hour that is wasted no matter what Chris does.C. an economic problem because the tuition Chris pays covers both the gym and the library.D. an economic problem because Chris has only one hour during which he can study or work out.13. Josh wants to go to the football game this weekend, but he has a paper due on Monday. It will take him the whole weekend to write the paper. Josh decided to stay home and work on the paper. According to the scarcity principle, the reason Josh didn't go to the game is that:A. Josh prefers schoolwork to football games.B. writing the paper is easier than going to the game.C. Josh doesn't have enough time for writing the paper and going to the game.D. it's too expensive to go to the game.14. Whether studying the size of the U.S. economy or the number of children a couple will choose to have, the unifying concept is that wants are:A. limited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.B. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.C. unlimited, resources are limited to some but not to others, and thus some people must make choices.D. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus government needs to do more.15. The cost-benefit principle indicates that an action should be taken:A. if the total benefits exceed the total costs.B. if the average benefits exceed the average costs.C. if the net benefit (benefit minus cost) is zero.D. if the extra benefit is greater than or equal to the extra costs.16. When a person decides to pursue an activity as long as the extra benefits are at least equal to the extra costs, that person is:A. violating the cost-benefit principle.B. following the scarcity principle.C. following the cost-benefit principle.D. pursuing the activity too long.17. Choosing to study for an exam until the extra benefit (improved score) equals the extra cost (mental fatigue) is:A. not rational.B. an application of the cost-benefit principle.C. an application of the scarcity principle.D. the relevant opportunity cost.18. The scarcity principle tells us that __________, and the cost-benefit principle tells us __________.A. choices must be made; how to make the choicesB. choices must be made; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choicesC. rare goods are expensive; that the costs should outweigh the benefits of the choicesD. rare goods are expensive; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choices19. According to the cost-benefit principle:A. the lowest cost activity usually gives the lowest benefit.B. a person should always choose the activity with the lowest cost.C. a person should always choose the activity with the greatest benefit.D. the extra costs and benefits of an activity are more important considerations than the total costs and benefits.20. A rational person is one who:A. is reasonable.B. makes choices that are easily understood.C. possesses well-defined goals and seeks to achieve them.D. is highly cynical.21. The seventh glass of soda that Tim consumes will produce an extra benefit of 10 cents and has an extra cost of zero (Tim is eating at the cafeteria). The cost-benefit principle predicts that Tim will:A. realize he has had too much soda to drink and go home.B. drink the seventh glass and continue until the marginal benefit of drinking another glass of soda is zero.C. volunteer to empty out the fountain.D. not drink the seventh glass.22. Janie must either mow the lawn or wash clothes, earning her a benefit of $30 or $45, respectively. She dislikes both equally and they both take the same amount of time. Janie will therefore choose to _________ because the economic surplus is ________.A. mow the lawn; greaterB. wash clothes; greaterC. mow the lawn; smallerD. wash clothes; smaller23. Dean decided to play golf rather than prepare for tomorrow's exam in economics. One can infer that:A. Dean has made an irrational choice.B. Dean is doing poorly in his economics class.C. the economic surplus from playing golf exceeded the surplus from studying.D. the cost of studying was less than the cost of golfing.Larry was accepted at three different graduate schools, and must choose one. Elite U costs $50,000 per year and did not offer Larry any financial aid. Larry values attending Elite U at $60,000 per year. State College costs $30,000 per year, and offered Larry an annual $10,000 scholarship. Larry values attending State College at $40,000 per year. NoName U costs $20,000 per year, and offered Larry a full $20,000 annual scholarship. Larry values attending NoName at $15,000 per year.24. The opportunity cost of attending Elite U is:A. $50,000B. $10,000C. $20,000D. $15,00025. The opportunity cost of attending State College is:A. $30,000B. $20,000C. $15,000D. $10,00026. Larry maximizes his surplus by attending:A. Elite U, because $60,000 is greater than the benefit at the other schools.B. State College, because the difference between the benefit and cost is greatest there.C. NoName U, because Larry has a full scholarship there.D. Elite U, because the opportunity costs of attending Elite U are the lowest.27. Larry has decided to go to Elite U. Assuming that all of the values described are correct, for Larry to decide on Elite U, he must have:A. calculated his surplus from each choice and picked the one with the highest surplus.B. underestimated the benefits of attending NoName.C. miscalculated the surplus of attending Elite U.D. determined the opportunity cost of each choice and picked the one with the lowest opportunity cost.28. Jen spends her afternoon at the beach, paying $1 to rent a beach umbrella and $11 for food and drinks rather than spending an equal amount of money to go to a movie. The opportunity cost of going to the beach is:A. the $12 she spent on the umbrella, food and drinks.B. only $1 because she would have spent the money on food and drinks whether or not she went to the beach.C. the movie she missed seeing.D. the movie she missed seeing plus the $12 she spent on the umbrella, food and drinks.29. Relative to a person who earns minimum wage, a person who earns $30 per hour has:A. a lower opportunity cost of working longer hours.B. a higher opportunity cost of taking a day off.C. a lower opportunity cost of driving farther to work.D. the same opportunity cost of spending time on leisure activities.30. The opportunity cost of an activity is the value of:A. an alternative forgone.B. the next-best alternative forgone.C. the least-best alternative forgone.D. the difference between the chosen activity and the next-best alternative forgone.31. Amy is thinking about going to the movies tonight. A ticket costs $7 and she will have to cancel her dog-sitting job that pays $30. The cost of seeing the movie is:A. $7.B. $30.C. $37.D. $37 minus the benefit of seeing the movie.32. Economic surplus is:A. the benefit gained by taking an action.B. the price paid to take an action.C. the difference between the benefit gained and the cost incurred of taking an action.D. the wage someone would have to earn in order to take an action.33. The Governor of your state has cut the budget for the University and increased spending on Medicaid. This is an example of:A. the pitfalls of considering average costs instead of marginal costs.B. poor normative economic decision making.C. poor positive economic decision making.D. choice in the face of limited resources.34. Sally earned $25,000 per year before she became a mother. After she became a mother, she told her employer that her opportunity cost of working is now $50,000, and so she is not willing to work for anything less. Her decision is based on:A. the high cost of raising a child.B. her desire to save for her child's college expenses.C. her increased value to her employer.D. the value she places on spending time with her child.35. Alex received a four-year scholarship to State U. that covered tuition and fees, room and board, and books and supplies. As a result:A. attending State U. for four years is costless for Alex.B. Alex has no incentive to work hard while at State U.C. the cost of attending State U. is the amount of money Alex could have earned working for four years.D. the cost of attending State U. is the sum of the benefits Alex would have had attending each of the four other schools to which Alex had been admitted.36. Suppose Mary is willing to pay up to $15,000 for a used Ford pick-up truck, but she finds one for $12,000. Her __________ is __________.A. benefit; $12,000B. cost; $15,000C. economic surplus; $3,000D. economic surplus; $12,00037. In general, rational decision making requires one to choose the actions that yield the:A. largest total benefits.B. smallest total costs.C. smallest net benefits.D. largest economic surpluses.38. Suppose the most you would be willing to pay for a plane ticket home is $250, but you buy one online for $175. The economic surplus of buying the online ticket is:A. $175.B. $250.C. $75.D. $0.39. The use of economic models, like the cost-benefit principle, means economists believe that:A. this is exactly how people choose between alternatives.B. this is a reasonable abstraction of how people choose between alternatives.C. those who explicitly make decisions this way are smarter.D. with enough education, all people will start to explicitly make decisions this way.40. Jenna decides to see a movie that costs $7 for the ticket and has an opportunity cost of $20. After the movie, she says to one of her friends that the movie was not worth it. Apparently:A. Jenna failed to apply the cost-benefit model to her decision.B. Jenna was not rational.C. Jenna overestimated the benefits of the movie.D. Jenna underestimated the benefits of the movie.41. Most of us make sensible decisions most of the time, because:A. we know the cost-benefit principle.B. subconsciously we are weighing costs and benefits.C. most people know about the scarcity principle.D. we conduct hypothetical mental auctions when we make decisions.42. Suppose a person makes a choice that seems inconsistent with the cost-benefit principle. Which of the following statements represents the most reasonable conclusion to draw?A. The person (explicitly or implicitly) over-estimated the benefits or under-estimated the costs or both.B. The cost-benefit principle is rarely true.C. The person does not grasp how decisions should be made.D. The person is simply irrational.43. Economic models are intended to:A. apply to all examples equally well.B. eliminate differences in the way people behave.C. generalize about patterns in decision-making.D. distinguish economics students from everyone else.44. Economic models claim to be:A. reasonable abstractions of how people make choices, highlighting the most important factors.B. exact replications of the decision-making process people use.C. interesting chalkboard exercises with little applicability to the real world.D. exceptionally accurate methods of predicting nearly all behavior of everyone.45. The cost-benefit model used by economists is:A. unrealistic because it is too detailed and specific to apply to a variety of situations.B. unrealistic because everyone can think of times when he or she violated the principle.C. useful because everyone follows it all of the time.D. useful because most people follow it most of the time.46. Barry owns a clothing store in the mall and has asked two economic consultants to develop models of consumer behavior that he can use to increase sales. Barry should choose the model that:A. does not include simplifying assumptions.B. is the most detailed and complex.C. assumes that consumers apply the cost-benefit principle.D. predicts that consumers will always prefer Barry's store to the competing stores.47. Economists use abstract models because:A. every economic situation is unique, so it is impossible to make generalizations.B. every economic situation is essentially the same, so specific details are unnecessary.C. they are useful for describing general patterns of behavior.D. computers have allowed economists to develop abstract models.48. Most people make some decisions based on intuition rather than calculation. This is:A. irrational, because intuition is often wrong.B. consistent with the economic model of decision-making, because calculating costs and benefits leads to decision-making pitfalls.C. consistent with the economic model because people intuitively compare the relative costs and benefits of the choices they face.D. inconsistent with the economic model, but rational because intuition takes into account non-financial considerations.49. Moe has a big exam tomorrow. He considered studying this evening, but decided to go out with Curly instead. Since Moe always chooses rationally, it must be true that: A. the opportunity cost of studying tonight is less than the value Moe gets from spending time with Curly.B. the opportunity cost of studying tonight is equal to the value Moe gets from spending time with Curly minus the cost of earning a low grade on the exam.C. Moe gets more benefit from spending time with Curly than from studying.D. Moe gets less benefit from spending time with Curly than from studying.50. If one fails to account for implicit costs in decision making, then applying thecost-benefit rule will be flawed because:A. the benefits will be overstated.B. the costs will be understated.C. the benefits will be understated.D. the costs will be overstated.Your classmates from the University of Chicago are planning to go to Miami for spring break, and you are undecided about whether you should go with them. The round-trip airfares are $600, but you have a frequent-flyer coupon worth $500 that you could use to pay part of the airfare. All other costs for the vacation are exactly $900. The most you would be willing to pay for the trip is $1400. Your only alternative use for your frequent-flyer coupon is for your trip to Atlanta two weeks after the break to attend your sister's graduation, which your parents are forcing you to attend. The Chicago-Atlanta round-trip airfares are $450.51. If you do not use the frequent-flyer coupon to fly, should you go to Miami?A. Yes, your benefit is more than your cost.B. No, your benefit is less than your cost.C. Yes, your benefit is equal to your cost.D. No, because there are no benefits in the trip.52. What is the opportunity cost of using the coupon for the Miami trip?A. $100B. $450C. $500D. $55053. If you use the frequent-flyer coupon to fly to Atlanta, would you get any economic surplus by making the trip?A. No, there is a loss of $50.B. Yes, surplus of $350.C. Yes, surplus of $400.D. Yes, surplus of $100.54. If the Chicago-Atlanta round-trip air fare is $350, should you go to Miami?A. No, there is a loss of $50.B. No, there is a loss of $100.C. Yes, there is economic surplus of $50.D. Yes, there is economic surplus of $400.55. Pat earns $25,000 per year (after taxes), and Pat's spouse, Chris, earns $35,000 (after taxes). They have two pre-school children. Childcare for their children costs $12,000 per year. Pat has decided to stay home and take care of the children. Pat must:A. value spending time with the children by more than $25,000.B. value spending time with the children by more than $12,000.C. value spending time with the children by more than $13,000.D. value spending time with the children as much as does Chris.You paid $35 for a ticket (which is non-refundable) to see SPAM, a local rock band, in concert on Saturday. (Assume that you would not have been willing to pay any more than $35 for this concert.) Your boss called and she is looking for someone to cover a shift on Saturday at the same time as the concert. You will have to work 4 hours and she will pay you time and a half, which is $9/hr.56. Should you go to the concert instead of working Saturday?A. Yes, your benefit is more than your cost.B. No, your benefit is less than your cost.C. Yes, your benefit is equal to your cost.D. No, because there are no benefits in the concert.57. What is the opportunity cost of going to the concert?A. $1B. $9C. $35D. $3658. What is your opportunity cost, if you go to work on Saturday?A. $0B. $9C. $35D. $3659. Your economic surplus of going to work on Saturday is:A. $0B. $1C. $35D. $36Matt has decided to purchase his textbooks for the semester. His options are to purchase the books via the Internet with next day delivery to his home at a cost of $175, or to drive to campus tomorrow to buy the books at the university bookstore at a cost of $170. Last week he drove to campus to buy a concert ticket because they offered 25 percent off the regular price of $16.因为他们提供75折的正常价格16美元。
最新微观经济学试题英文版资料
精品文档Managerial EconomicsPart 1:1. The price of good A goes up. As a result the demand for good B shifts to the left. From this we can infer that:a. good A is a normal good.b. good B is an inferior good.c. goods A and B are substitutes.d. goods A and B are complements.e. none of the above.Choose: d) the definition os complements2. Joe's budget line is 15F + 45C = 900. When Joe chooses his most preferred market basket, he buys 10 units of C. therefore, he also buys :a. 10 units of Fb. 30 units of Fc. 50 units of Fd. 60 units of Fe. None of the aboveChoose: b) We assume that Joe will spend all his income. If C = 10, then 15F =900 – 45(10) =450, so F = 450/15 =30.3. Kim only buys coffee and compact discs. Coffee costs $0.60 per cup, and CDs cost $12.00 each. She has $18 per week to spend on these two goods. If Kim is maximizing her utility, her marginal rate of substitution of coffee for CDs is:a. 0.05b. 20c. 18d. 1.50e. None of the aboveChoose: a) At Kim's most preferred market basket, her MRS equals the price ratio (Pcoffee/PCD), which equals 0.6/12 or 0.05.4. The bandwagon effect corresponds best to which of the following?a. snob effect.b. external economy.c. negative network externality.d. positive network externality.Choose: d)5. A Giffen gooda. is always the same as an inferior good.b. is the special subset of inferior goods in which the substitution effect dominates the income effect.c. is the special subset of inferior goods in which the income effect dominates the substitution effect.d. must have a downward sloping demand curve.Choose: c) the definition of Giffen good6. An Engel curve for a good has a positive slope if the good is :a. an inferior good.b. a Giffen good.c. a normal good. d. a, b, and c are true.e. None of the above is true.Choose: c) Inferior and Giffen goods have negatively sloped Engel curves.7. The price of beef and quantity of beef traded are P* and Q*, respectively. Given this information, consumer surplus is the area:a. 0BCQ*b. ABCc. ACP*d. CBP*e. 0ACQ*Choose: d)Consumer surplus is the area between the demand line and the price.8. In Figure 1, holding income constant, what change must have occurred to rotate the budget line from the old line(1) to the new line(2)?Figure 1a. The price of Coke fellb. The price of pizza fellc. The price of pizza rosed. The price of Coke went upe. b and cChoose: b) The horizontal intercept, I/PC, is unchanged, which implies that PC could not have changed (holding income constant). Since the slope is PP/PC, the slope change means that the price of pizza must have fallen. This can also be seen intuitively from Figure 1, since the consumer can now buy more pizza than before if he spends all his income on pizza.9. Andy buys 10 pounds of onions per month when the price is $0.75 per pound. If the price falls to $0.50 per pound, he buys 30 pounds of onions. What is his arc elasticity of demand over this price range?a. - 1.33b.–2c.–2.5d. - 6e. None of the above is correct. Choose: c) Using the arc elasticity formula,5.22)1030(2)75.050.0()75.050.0()1030(-=÷+÷⨯⨯--=⨯∆∆=Q P P Q EP The next two questions refer to the following information: Opie and Gomer are theonly two consumers in the video cassette rental market in the Mayberry. Their demand curves per week are pictured in Figure 2.10. If rentals cost $2.50 each, the total quantity demanded each week in the market is :a. 3b. 6c. 15d. 10e. None of the above is correct.Choose: b) Add horizontally to get the market demand curve. At P = $2.50, QO = 3 and QG = 3 for a total of 6 units demanded.11. For a decrease in price from $2.50 to $1.50, market demand is :a. elastic.b. unit elastic. c. inelastic.d. perfectly inelastic.e. More information is needed. Choose: a) Demand is price elastic:EP = %ΔQ/%Δ(a)12. As president and CEO of MegaWorld industries, you must decide on some very risky alternative investments:a. A.b. B.c. C.d. D.e. EChoose: b) Ea=2 Eb=6.8 Ec=0 Ed=6 Ee=613. An individual with a constant marginal utility of income will bea. risk averse.b. risk neutral.c. risk loving.d. insufficient information for a decision.Choose: b)An individual with a constant marginal utility of income is risk neutral.14. In the figure below, what is true about the two jobs?a.Job 1 has a lower standard deviation than Job 2.b.All outcomes in both jobs have the same probability of occurrence.c. A risk-averse person would prefer Job 2.d. A risk-neutral person would prefer Job 1.e.Job 1 has a higher expected income than Job 2.Choose: a) Job 1 has a lower standard deviation than Job 2. Expected income of Job 1 equals to Job 2.Part 2:The demand curves for steak, eggs, and hot dogs are given in the table below. The current price of steak is $5. The price of eggs is $2.50, and the price of hot dogs is $0.75. Fill in the remaining columns of the table using this information.Solution:Steak and eggs are complements. Steak and hotdogs and eggs and hotdogs are substitutes.Part 3:Draw indifference curves to represent the following descriptions of consumer preferences:a. I can’t taste the difference between ap ple and grape jelly, but I likethem both.b. I only like grape jelly and never eat apple jelly.c. Apple and grape jelly are better mixed, although I don’t care too much about theproportions.Answer:a) See Figure 7(a). Since the consumer can not tell the difference between the two flavors, all he would care about is the total amount of jelly he has.b) See Figure 7(b). An increase in the amount of apple jelly does not affect the consumer since he never eats it.c) See Figure 7(c). Here, a mixed bundle is better than an extreme one, but the consumer is willing to trade off the different flavors.Figure 7Part 4:There are reasons other than fads, fashions, and consumer insecurity for bandwagon and snob effects. Various types of externalities in the consumption of certain goods also exist. Explain which these effects (bandwagon or snob) might be present in the following cases:a. A restaurant that is often crowdedb. A personal computer software productc. A rock concertAnswer:Ounces of Grape Jelly Ounces of Apple Jelly (a) Ounces of Grape Jelly Ounces of Apple Jelly(b) (c) Ounces of Grape Jelly Ounces ofApple Jellya) A price decrease will attract more customers, but the crowding(longer lines,poorer service) will discourage others. This would resemble a snob effect. b) The more people you expect to buy a software product, the more likely you canfind another experienced user to ask questions about it. Also, the more likely it is that a computer bookstore will carry publications about how to use the software. Thus, we would expect to see a bandwagon effect.c) Here, crowding might discourage some customers. But, since part of the enjoyment of a concert is seeing the band with other fans, we might observe a bandwagon effect.Part 5:Tom Wilson is the operations manager for Bi-Corp, a real estate investment firm. Tom must decide if Bi-Corp is to invest in a strip mall in a northeast metropolitan area. If the shopping center is highly successful, after tax profits will be $100,000 per year. Moderate success would yield an annual profit of $50,000, while the project will lose $10,000 per year if it is unsuccessful. Past experience suggests that there is a 40% chance that the project will be highly successful, a 40% chance of moderate success, and a 20% probability that the project will be unsuccessful. a. Calculate the expected value and standard deviation of profit. b. The project requires an $800,000 investment. If Bi-Corp has an 8% opportunity coston invested funds of similar riskiness, should the project be undertaken? Solution:a.Expected Value∑==n1i ^i ^i P ππ50,000 .4 20,000 -10,000 .2 -2,000Standard deviation100,000 42,000, 764,000,000 705,600,00050,000 -8,000 64,000,000 25,600,000 -10,000 -68,000 4,624,000,000 924,800,000b.Bio-Corp's opportunity cost is 8% of 800,000 or 0.08 x 800,000 = 64,000.The expected value of the project is less than the opportunity cost. Bi-Corp should not undertake the project.。
微观经济学的练习试题以和答案解析英文版
Chapter 01Thinking Like an Economist Multiple Choice Questions1. Economics is best defined as the study of:A. prices and quantities.B. inflation and interest rates.C. how people make choices under the conditions of scarcity and the results of those choices.D. wages and incomes.2. Economic questions always deal with:A. financial matters.B. political matters.C. insufficient resources.D. choice in the face of limited resources.3. The range of topics or issues that fit within the definition of economics is:A. limited to market activities, e.g., buying soap.B. limited to individuals and firms.C. extremely wide, requiring only the ideas of choice and scarcity.D. very limited.4. The central concern of economics is:A. poverty.B. scarcity.C. wealth accumulation.D. overconsumption.5. The scarcity principle indicates that:A. no matter how much one has, it is never enough.B. compared to 100 years ago, individuals have less time today.C. with limited resources, having more of "this" means having less of "that."D. because tradeoffs must be made, resources are therefore scarce.6. The logical implication of the scarcity principle is that:A. one will never be satisfied with what one has.B. as wealth increases, making choices becomes less necessary.C. as wealth decreases, making choices becomes less necessary.D. choices must be made.7. If all the world's resources were to magically increase a hundredfold, then:A. the scarcity principle would still govern behavior.B. economics would no longer be relevant.C. the scarcity principle would disappear.D. tradeoffs would become unnecessary.8. The principle of scarcity applies to:A. the poor exclusively.B. all consumers.C. all firms.D. everyone—consumers, firms, governments, and nations.9. At the very least, Joe Average and Bill Gates are both identically limited by:A. their wealth.B. the 24 hours that comprise a day.C. their knowledge.D. their influence.10. Forest is a mountain man living in complete isolation in Montana. He is completely self-sufficient through hunting, fishing, and farming. He has not been in the city to buy anything in five years. One can infer:A. the scarcity principle does not apply to Forest.B. Forest is not required to make choices.C. the scarcity principle still applies because more hunting means less fishing and farming.D. Forest is very satisfied.11. The scarcity principle applies to:A. all decisions.B. only market decisions, e.g., buying a car.C. only non-market decisions, e.g., watching a sunset.D. only the poor.12. Chris has a one-hour break between classes every Wednesday. Chris can either stay at the library and study or go to the gym and work out. The decision Chris must make is:A. not an economic problem because neither one costs money.B. not an economic problem because it's an hour that is wasted no matter what Chris does.C. an economic problem because the tuition Chris pays covers both the gym and the library.D. an economic problem because Chris has only one hour during which he can study or work out.13. Josh wants to go to the football game this weekend, but he has a paper due on Monday. It will take him the whole weekend to write the paper. Josh decided to stay home and work on the paper. According to the scarcity principle, the reason Josh didn't go to the game is that:A. Josh prefers schoolwork to football games.B. writing the paper is easier than going to the game.C. Josh doesn't have enough time for writing the paper and going to the game.D. it's too expensive to go to the game.14. Whether studying the size of the U.S. economy or the number of children a couple will choose to have, the unifying concept is that wants are:A. limited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.B. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.C. unlimited, resources are limited to some but not to others, and thus some people must make choices.D. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus government needs to do more.15. The cost-benefit principle indicates that an action should be taken:A. if the total benefits exceed the total costs.B. if the average benefits exceed the average costs.C. if the net benefit (benefit minus cost) is zero.D. if the extra benefit is greater than or equal to the extra costs.16. When a person decides to pursue an activity as long as the extra benefits are at least equal to the extra costs, that person is:A. violating the cost-benefit principle.B. following the scarcity principle.C. following the cost-benefit principle.D. pursuing the activity too long.17. Choosing to study for an exam until the extra benefit (improved score) equals the extra cost (mental fatigue) is:A. not rational.B. an application of the cost-benefit principle.C. an application of the scarcity principle.D. the relevant opportunity cost.18. The scarcity principle tells us that __________, and the cost-benefit principle tells us __________.A. choices must be made; how to make the choicesB. choices must be made; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choicesC. rare goods are expensive; that the costs should outweigh the benefits of the choicesD. rare goods are expensive; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choices19. According to the cost-benefit principle:A. the lowest cost activity usually gives the lowest benefit.B. a person should always choose the activity with the lowest cost.C. a person should always choose the activity with the greatest benefit.D. the extra costs and benefits of an activity are more important considerations than the total costs and benefits.20. A rational person is one who:A. is reasonable.B. makes choices that are easily understood.C. possesses well-defined goals and seeks to achieve them.D. is highly cynical.21. The seventh glass of soda that Tim consumes will produce an extra benefit of 10 cents and has an extra cost of zero (Tim is eating at the cafeteria). The cost-benefit principle predicts that Tim will:A. realize he has had too much soda to drink and go home.B. drink the seventh glass and continue until the marginal benefit of drinking another glass of soda is zero.C. volunteer to empty out the fountain.D. not drink the seventh glass.22. Janie must either mow the lawn or wash clothes, earning her a benefit of $30 or $45, respectively. She dislikes both equally and they both take the same amount of time. Janie will therefore choose to_________ because the economic surplus is ________.A. mow the lawn; greaterB. wash clothes; greaterC. mow the lawn; smallerD. wash clothes; smaller23. Dean decided to play golf rather than prepare for tomorrow's exam in economics. One can infer that:A. Dean has made an irrational choice.B. Dean is doing poorly in his economics class.C. the economic surplus from playing golf exceeded the surplus from studying.D. the cost of studying was less than the cost of golfing.Larry was accepted at three different graduate schools, and must choose one. Elite U costs $50,000 per year and did not offer Larry any financial aid. Larry values attending Elite U at $60,000 per year. State College costs $30,000 per year, and offered Larry an annual $10,000 scholarship. Larry values attending State College at $40,000 per year. NoName U costs $20,000 per year, and offered Larry a full $20,000 annual scholarship. Larry values attending NoName at $15,000 per year.24. The opportunity cost of attending Elite U is:A. $50,000B. $10,000C. $20,000D. $15,00025. The opportunity cost of attending State College is:A. $30,000B. $20,000C. $15,000D. $10,00026. Larry maximizes his surplus by attending:A. Elite U, because $60,000 is greater than the benefit at the other schools.B. State College, because the difference between the benefit and cost is greatest there.C. NoName U, because Larry has a full scholarship there.D. Elite U, because the opportunity costs of attending Elite U are the lowest.27. Larry has decided to go to Elite U. Assuming that all of the values described are correct, for Larry to decide on Elite U, he must have: A. calculated his surplus from each choice and picked the one with the highest surplus.B. underestimated the benefits of attending NoName.C. miscalculated the surplus of attending Elite U.D. determined the opportunity cost of each choice and picked the one with the lowest opportunity cost.28. Jen spends her afternoon at the beach, paying $1 to rent a beach umbrella and $11 for food and drinks rather than spending an equal amount of money to go to a movie. The opportunity cost of going to the beach is:A. the $12 she spent on the umbrella, food and drinks.B. only $1 because she would have spent the money on food and drinks whether or not she went to the beach.C. the movie she missed seeing.D. the movie she missed seeing plus the $12 she spent on the umbrella, food and drinks.29. Relative to a person who earns minimum wage, a person who earns $30 per hour has:A. a lower opportunity cost of working longer hours.B. a higher opportunity cost of taking a day off.C. a lower opportunity cost of driving farther to work.D. the same opportunity cost of spending time on leisure activities.30. The opportunity cost of an activity is the value of:A. an alternative forgone.B. the next-best alternative forgone.C. the least-best alternative forgone.D. the difference between the chosen activity and the next-best alternative forgone.31. Amy is thinking about going to the movies tonight. A ticket costs $7 and she will have to cancel her dog-sitting job that pays $30. The cost of seeing the movie is:A. $7.B. $30.C. $37.D. $37 minus the benefit of seeing the movie.32. Economic surplus is:A. the benefit gained by taking an action.B. the price paid to take an action.C. the difference between the benefit gained and the cost incurred of taking an action.D. the wage someone would have to earn in order to take an action.33. The Governor of your state has cut the budget for the University and increased spending on Medicaid. This is an example of:A. the pitfalls of considering average costs instead of marginal costs.B. poor normative economic decision making.C. poor positive economic decision making.D. choice in the face of limited resources.34. Sally earned $25,000 per year before she became a mother. After she became a mother, she told her employer that her opportunity cost of working is now $50,000, and so she is not willing to work for anything less. Her decision is based on:A. the high cost of raising a child.B. her desire to save for her child's college expenses.C. her increased value to her employer.D. the value she places on spending time with her child.35. Alex received a four-year scholarship to State U. that covered tuition and fees, room and board, and books and supplies. As a result:A. attending State U. for four years is costless for Alex.B. Alex has no incentive to work hard while at State U.C. the cost of attending State U. is the amount of money Alex could have earned working for four years.D. the cost of attending State U. is the sum of the benefits Alex would have had attending each of the four other schools to which Alex had been admitted.36. Suppose Mary is willing to pay up to $15,000 for a used Ford pick-up truck, but she finds one for $12,000. Her __________ is __________.A. benefit; $12,000B. cost; $15,000C. economic surplus; $3,000D. economic surplus; $12,00037. In general, rational decision making requires one to choose the actions that yield the:A. largest total benefits.B. smallest total costs.C. smallest net benefits.D. largest economic surpluses.38. Suppose the most you would be willing to pay for a plane ticket home is $250, but you buy one online for $175. The economic surplus of buying the online ticket is:A. $175.B. $250.C. $75.D. $0.39. The use of economic models, like the cost-benefit principle, means economists believe that:A. this is exactly how people choose between alternatives.B. this is a reasonable abstraction of how people choose between alternatives.C. those who explicitly make decisions this way are smarter.D. with enough education, all people will start to explicitly make decisions this way.40. Jenna decides to see a movie that costs $7 for the ticket and has an opportunity cost of $20. After the movie, she says to one of her friends that the movie was not worth it. Apparently:A. Jenna failed to apply the cost-benefit model to her decision.B. Jenna was not rational.C. Jenna overestimated the benefits of the movie.D. Jenna underestimated the benefits of the movie.41. Most of us make sensible decisions most of the time, because:A. we know the cost-benefit principle.B. subconsciously we are weighing costs and benefits.C. most people know about the scarcity principle.D. we conduct hypothetical mental auctions when we make decisions.42. Suppose a person makes a choice that seems inconsistent with the cost-benefit principle. Which of the following statements represents the most reasonable conclusion to draw?A. The person (explicitly or implicitly) over-estimated the benefits or under-estimated the costs or both.B. The cost-benefit principle is rarely true.C. The person does not grasp how decisions should be made.D. The person is simply irrational.43. Economic models are intended to:A. apply to all examples equally well.B. eliminate differences in the way people behave.C. generalize about patterns in decision-making.D. distinguish economics students from everyone else.44. Economic models claim to be:A. reasonable abstractions of how people make choices, highlighting the most important factors.B. exact replications of the decision-making process people use.C. interesting chalkboard exercises with little applicability to the real world.D. exceptionally accurate methods of predicting nearly all behavior of everyone.45. The cost-benefit model used by economists is:A. unrealistic because it is too detailed and specific to apply to a variety of situations.B. unrealistic because everyone can think of times when he or she violated the principle.C. useful because everyone follows it all of the time.D. useful because most people follow it most of the time.46. Barry owns a clothing store in the mall and has asked two economic consultants to develop models of consumer behavior that he can use to increase sales. Barry should choose the model that:A. does not include simplifying assumptions.B. is the most detailed and complex.C. assumes that consumers apply the cost-benefit principle.D. predicts that consumers will always prefer Barry's store to the competing stores.47. Economists use abstract models because:A. every economic situation is unique, so it is impossible to make generalizations.B. every economic situation is essentially the same, so specific details are unnecessary.C. they are useful for describing general patterns of behavior.D. computers have allowed economists to develop abstract models.48. Most people make some decisions based on intuition rather than calculation. This is:A. irrational, because intuition is often wrong.B. consistent with the economic model of decision-making, because calculating costs and benefits leads to decision-making pitfalls.C. consistent with the economic model because people intuitively compare the relative costs and benefits of the choices they face.D. inconsistent with the economic model, but rational because intuition takes into account non-financial considerations.49. Moe has a big exam tomorrow. He considered studying this evening, but decided to go out with Curly instead. Since Moe always chooses rationally, it must be true that:A. the opportunity cost of studying tonight is less than the value Moe gets from spending time with Curly.B. the opportunity cost of studying tonight is equal to the value Moe gets from spending time with Curly minus the cost of earning a low grade on the exam.C. Moe gets more benefit from spending time with Curly than from studying.D. Moe gets less benefit from spending time with Curly than from studying.50. If one fails to account for implicit costs in decision making, then applying the cost-benefit rule will be flawed because:A. the benefits will be overstated.B. the costs will be understated.C. the benefits will be understated.D. the costs will be overstated.Your classmates from the University of Chicago are planning to go to Miami for spring break, and you are undecided about whether you should go with them. The round-trip airfares are $600, but you have a frequent-flyer coupon worth $500 that you could use to pay part of the airfare. All other costs for the vacation are exactly $900. The most you would be willing to pay for the trip is $1400. Your only alternative use for your frequent-flyer coupon is for your trip to Atlanta two weeks after the break to attend your sister's graduation, which your parents are forcing you to attend. The Chicago-Atlanta round-trip airfares are $450.51. If you do not use the frequent-flyer coupon to fly, should you go to Miami?A. Yes, your benefit is more than your cost.B. No, your benefit is less than your cost.C. Yes, your benefit is equal to your cost.D. No, because there are no benefits in the trip.52. What is the opportunity cost of using the coupon for the Miami trip?A. $100B. $450C. $500D. $55053. If you use the frequent-flyer coupon to fly to Atlanta, would you get any economic surplus by making the trip?A. No, there is a loss of $50.B. Yes, surplus of $350.C. Yes, surplus of $400.D. Yes, surplus of $100.54. If the Chicago-Atlanta round-trip air fare is $350, should you go to Miami?A. No, there is a loss of $50.B. No, there is a loss of $100.C. Yes, there is economic surplus of $50.D. Yes, there is economic surplus of $400.55. Pat earns $25,000 per year (after taxes), and Pat's spouse, Chris, earns $35,000 (after taxes). They have two pre-school children. Childcare for their children costs $12,000 per year. Pat has decided to stay home and take care of the children. Pat must:A. value spending time with the children by more than $25,000.B. value spending time with the children by more than $12,000.C. value spending time with the children by more than $13,000.D. value spending time with the children as much as does Chris.You paid $35 for a ticket (which is non-refundable) to see SPAM, a local rock band, in concert on Saturday. (Assume that you would not have been willing to pay any more than $35 for this concert.) Your boss called and she is looking for someone to cover a shift on Saturday at the same time as the concert. You will have to work 4 hours and she will pay you time and a half, which is $9/hr.56. Should you go to the concert instead of working Saturday?A. Yes, your benefit is more than your cost.B. No, your benefit is less than your cost.C. Yes, your benefit is equal to your cost.D. No, because there are no benefits in the concert.57. What is the opportunity cost of going to the concert?A. $1B. $9C. $35D. $3658. What is your opportunity cost, if you go to work on Saturday?A. $0B. $9C. $35D. $3659. Your economic surplus of going to work on Saturday is:A. $0B. $1C. $35D. $36Matt has decided to purchase his textbooks for the semester. His options are to purchase the books via the Internet with next day delivery to his home at a cost of $175, or to drive to campus tomorrow to buy the books at the university bookstore at a cost of $170. Last week he drove to campus to buy a concert ticket because they offered 25 percent off the regular price of $16.因为他们提供75折的正常价格16美元。
微观经济学 英文版 题库 练习完整版
Chapter 01Thinking Like an Economist Multiple Choice Questions1. Economics is best defined as the study of:A. prices and quantities.B. inflation and interest rates.C. how people make choices under the conditions of scarcity and the results of those choices.D. wages and incomes.2. Economic questions always deal with:A. financial matters.B. political matters.C. insufficient resources.D. choice in the face of limited resources.3. The range of topics or issues that fit within the definition of economics is:A. limited to market activities, e.g., buying soap.B. limited to individuals and firms.C. extremely wide, requiring only the ideas of choice and scarcity.D. very limited.4. The central concern of economics is:A. poverty.B. scarcity.C. wealth accumulation.D. overconsumption.5. The scarcity principle indicates that:A. no matter how much one has, it is never enough.B. compared to 100 years ago, individuals have less time today.C. with limited resources, having more of "this" means having less of "that."D. because tradeoffs must be made, resources are therefore scarce.6. The logical implication of the scarcity principle is that:A. one will never be satisfied with what one has.B. as wealth increases, making choices becomes less necessary.C. as wealth decreases, making choices becomes less necessary.D. choices must be made.7. If all the world's resources were to magically increase a hundredfold, then:A. the scarcity principle would still govern behavior.B. economics would no longer be relevant.C. the scarcity principle would disappear.D. tradeoffs would become unnecessary.8. The principle of scarcity applies to:A. the poor exclusively.B. all consumers.C. all firms.D. everyone—consumers, firms, governments, and nations.9. At the very least, Joe Average and Bill Gates are both identically limited by:A. their wealth.B. the 24 hours that comprise a day.C. their knowledge.D. their influence.10. Forest is a mountain man living in complete isolation in Montana. He is completely self-sufficient through hunting, fishing, and farming. He has not been in the city to buy anything in five years. One can infer:A. the scarcity principle does not apply to Forest.B. Forest is not required to make choices.C. the scarcity principle still applies because more hunting means less fishing and farming.D. Forest is very satisfied.11. The scarcity principle applies to:A. all decisions.B. only market decisions, e.g., buying a car.C. only non-market decisions, e.g., watching a sunset.D. only the poor.12. Chris has a one-hour break between classes every Wednesday. Chris can either stay at the library and study or go to the gym and work out. The decision Chris must make is:A. not an economic problem because neither one costs money.B. not an economic problem because it's an hour that is wasted no matter what Chris does.C. an economic problem because the tuition Chris pays covers both the gym and the library.D. an economic problem because Chris has only one hour during which he can study or work out.13. Josh wants to go to the football game this weekend, but he has a paper due on Monday. It will take him the whole weekend to write the paper. Josh decided to stay home and work on the paper. According to the scarcity principle, the reason Josh didn't go to the game is that:A. Josh prefers schoolwork to football games.B. writing the paper is easier than going to the game.C. Josh doesn't have enough time for writing the paper and going to the game.D. it's too expensive to go to the game.14. Whether studying the size of the U.S. economy or the number of children a couple will choose to have, the unifying concept is that wants are:A. limited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.B. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.C. unlimited, resources are limited to some but not to others, and thus some people must make choices.D. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus government needs to do more.15. The cost-benefit principle indicates that an action should be taken:A. if the total benefits exceed the total costs.B. if the average benefits exceed the average costs.C. if the net benefit (benefit minus cost) is zero.D. if the extra benefit is greater than or equal to the extra costs.16. When a person decides to pursue an activity as long as the extra benefits are at least equal to the extra costs, that person is:A. violating the cost-benefit principle.B. following the scarcity principle.C. following the cost-benefit principle.D. pursuing the activity too long.17. Choosing to study for an exam until the extra benefit (improved score) equals the extra cost (mental fatigue) is:A. not rational.B. an application of the cost-benefit principle.C. an application of the scarcity principle.D. the relevant opportunity cost.18. The scarcity principle tells us that __________, and the cost-benefit principle tells us __________.A. choices must be made; how to make the choicesB. choices must be made; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choicesC. rare goods are expensive; that the costs should outweigh the benefits of the choicesD. rare goods are expensive; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choices19. According to the cost-benefit principle:A. the lowest cost activity usually gives the lowest benefit.B. a person should always choose the activity with the lowest cost.C. a person should always choose the activity with the greatest benefit.D. the extra costs and benefits of an activity are more important considerations than the total costs and benefits.20. A rational person is one who:A. is reasonable.B. makes choices that are easily understood.C. possesses well-defined goals and seeks to achieve them.D. is highly cynical.21. The seventh glass of soda that Tim consumes will produce an extra benefit of 10 cents and has an extra cost of zero (Tim is eating at the cafeteria). Thecost-benefit principle predicts that Tim will:A. realize he has had too much soda to drink and go home.B. drink the seventh glass and continue until the marginal benefit of drinking another glass of soda is zero.C. volunteer to empty out the fountain.D. not drink the seventh glass.22. Janie must either mow the lawn or wash clothes, earning her a benefit of $30 or $45, respectively. She dislikes both equally and they both take the same amount of time. Janie will therefore choose to _________ because the economic surplus is ________.A. mow the lawn; greaterB. wash clothes; greaterC. mow the lawn; smallerD. wash clothes; smaller23. Dean decided to play golf rather than prepare for tomorrow's exam in economics. One can infer that:A. Dean has made an irrational choice.B. Dean is doing poorly in his economics class.C. the economic surplus from playing golf exceeded the surplus from studying.D. the cost of studying was less than the cost of golfing.Larry was accepted at three different graduate schools, and must choose one. Elite U costs $50,000 per year and did not offer Larry any financial aid. Larry values attending Elite U at $60,000 per year. State College costs $30,000 per year, and offered Larry an annual $10,000 scholarship. Larry values attending State College at $40,000 per year. NoName U costs $20,000 per year, and offered Larry a full $20,000 annual scholarship. Larry values attending NoName at $15,000 per year.24. The opportunity cost of attending Elite U is:A. $50,000B. $10,000C. $20,000D. $15,00025. The opportunity cost of attending State College is:A. $30,000B. $20,000C. $15,000D. $10,00026. Larry maximizes his surplus by attending:A. Elite U, because $60,000 is greater than the benefit at the other schools.B. State College, because the difference between the benefit and cost is greatest there.C. NoName U, because Larry has a full scholarship there.D. Elite U, because the opportunity costs of attending Elite U are the lowest.27. Larry has decided to go to Elite U. Assuming that all of the values described are correct, for Larry to decide on Elite U, he must have:A. calculated his surplus from each choice and picked the one with the highest surplus.B. underestimated the benefits of attending NoName.C. miscalculated the surplus of attending Elite U.D. determined the opportunity cost of each choice and picked the one with the lowest opportunity cost.28. Jen spends her afternoon at the beach, paying $1 to rent a beach umbrella and $11 for food and drinks rather than spending an equal amount of money to go to a movie. The opportunity cost of going to the beach is:A. the $12 she spent on the umbrella, food and drinks.B. only $1 because she would have spent the money on food and drinks whether or not she went to the beach.C. the movie she missed seeing.D. the movie she missed seeing plus the $12 she spent on the umbrella, food and drinks.29. Relative to a person who earns minimum wage, a person who earns $30 per hour has:A. a lower opportunity cost of working longer hours.B. a higher opportunity cost of taking a day off.C. a lower opportunity cost of driving farther to work.D. the same opportunity cost of spending time on leisure activities.30. The opportunity cost of an activity is the value of:A. an alternative forgone.B. the next-best alternative forgone.C. the least-best alternative forgone.D. the difference between the chosen activity and the next-best alternative forgone.31. Amy is thinking about going to the movies tonight. A ticket costs $7 and she will have to cancel her dog-sitting job that pays $30. The cost of seeing the movie is:A. $7.B. $30.C. $37.D. $37 minus the benefit of seeing the movie.32. Economic surplus is:A. the benefit gained by taking an action.B. the price paid to take an action.C. the difference between the benefit gained and the cost incurred of taking an action.D. the wage someone would have to earn in order to take an action.33. The Governor of your state has cut the budget for the University and increased spending on Medicaid. This is an example of:A. the pitfalls of considering average costs instead of marginal costs.B. poor normative economic decision making.C. poor positive economic decision making.D. choice in the face of limited resources.34. Sally earned $25,000 per year before she became a mother. After she becamea mother, she told her employer that her opportunity cost of working is now $50,000, and so she is not willing to work for anything less. Her decision is based on:A. the high cost of raising a child.B. her desire to save for her child's college expenses.C. her increased value to her employer.D. the value she places on spending time with her child.35. Alex received a four-year scholarship to State U. that covered tuition and fees, room and board, and books and supplies. As a result:A. attending State U. for four years is costless for Alex.B. Alex has no incentive to work hard while at State U.C. the cost of attending State U. is the amount of money Alex could have earned working for four years.D. the cost of attending State U. is the sum of the benefits Alex would have had attending each of the four other schools to which Alex had been admitted.36. Suppose Mary is willing to pay up to $15,000 for a used Ford pick-up truck, but she finds one for $12,000. Her __________ is __________.A. benefit; $12,000B. cost; $15,000C. economic surplus; $3,000D. economic surplus; $12,00037. In general, rational decision making requires one to choose the actions that yield the:A. largest total benefits.B. smallest total costs.C. smallest net benefits.D. largest economic surpluses.38. Suppose the most you would be willing to pay for a plane ticket home is $250, but you buy one online for $175. The economic surplus of buying the online ticket is:A. $175.B. $250.C. $75.D. $0.39. The use of economic models, like the cost-benefit principle, means economists believe that:A. this is exactly how people choose between alternatives.B. this is a reasonable abstraction of how people choose between alternatives.C. those who explicitly make decisions this way are smarter.D. with enough education, all people will start to explicitly make decisions this way.40. Jenna decides to see a movie that costs $7 for the ticket and has an opportunity cost of $20. After the movie, she says to one of her friends that the movie was not worth it. Apparently:A. Jenna failed to apply the cost-benefit model to her decision.B. Jenna was not rational.C. Jenna overestimated the benefits of the movie.D. Jenna underestimated the benefits of the movie.41. Most of us make sensible decisions most of the time, because:A. we know the cost-benefit principle.B. subconsciously we are weighing costs and benefits.C. most people know about the scarcity principle.D. we conduct hypothetical mental auctions when we make decisions.42. Suppose a person makes a choice that seems inconsistent with the cost-benefit principle. Which of the following statements represents the most reasonable conclusion to draw?A. The person (explicitly or implicitly) over-estimated the benefits orunder-estimated the costs or both.B. The cost-benefit principle is rarely true.C. The person does not grasp how decisions should be made.D. The person is simply irrational.43. Economic models are intended to:A. apply to all examples equally well.B. eliminate differences in the way people behave.C. generalize about patterns in decision-making.D. distinguish economics students from everyone else.44. Economic models claim to be:A. reasonable abstractions of how people make choices, highlighting the most important factors.B. exact replications of the decision-making process people use.C. interesting chalkboard exercises with little applicability to the real world.D. exceptionally accurate methods of predicting nearly all behavior of everyone.45. The cost-benefit model used by economists is:A. unrealistic because it is too detailed and specific to apply to a variety of situations.B. unrealistic because everyone can think of times when he or she violated the principle.C. useful because everyone follows it all of the time.D. useful because most people follow it most of the time.46. Barry owns a clothing store in the mall and has asked two economic consultants to develop models of consumer behavior that he can use to increase sales. Barry should choose the model that:A. does not include simplifying assumptions.B. is the most detailed and complex.C. assumes that consumers apply the cost-benefit principle.D. predicts that consumers will always prefer Barry's store to the competing stores.47. Economists use abstract models because:A. every economic situation is unique, so it is impossible to make generalizations.B. every economic situation is essentially the same, so specific details are unnecessary.C. they are useful for describing general patterns of behavior.D. computers have allowed economists to develop abstract models.48. Most people make some decisions based on intuition rather than calculation. This is:A. irrational, because intuition is often wrong.B. consistent with the economic model of decision-making, because calculating costs and benefits leads to decision-making pitfalls.C. consistent with the economic model because people intuitively compare the relative costs and benefits of the choices they face.D. inconsistent with the economic model, but rational because intuition takes into account non-financial considerations.49. Moe has a big exam tomorrow. He considered studying this evening, but decided to go out with Curly instead. Since Moe always chooses rationally, it must be true that:A. the opportunity cost of studying tonight is less than the value Moe gets from spending time with Curly.B. the opportunity cost of studying tonight is equal to the value Moe gets from spending time with Curly minus the cost of earning a low grade on the exam.C. Moe gets more benefit from spending time with Curly than from studying.D. Moe gets less benefit from spending time with Curly than from studying.50. If one fails to account for implicit costs in decision making, then applying the cost-benefit rule will be flawed because:A. the benefits will be overstated.B. the costs will be understated.C. the benefits will be understated.D. the costs will be overstated.Your classmates from the University of Chicago are planning to go to Miami for spring break, and you are undecided about whether you should go with them. The round-trip airfares are $600, but you have a frequent-flyer coupon worth $500 that you could use to pay part of the airfare. All other costs for the vacation are exactly $900. The most you would be willing to pay for the trip is $1400. Your only alternative use for your frequent-flyer coupon is for your trip to Atlanta two weeks after the break to attend your sister's graduation, which your parents are forcing you to attend. The Chicago-Atlanta round-trip airfares are $450.51. If you do not use the frequent-flyer coupon to fly, should you go to Miami?A. Yes, your benefit is more than your cost.B. No, your benefit is less than your cost.C. Yes, your benefit is equal to your cost.D. No, because there are no benefits in the trip.52. What is the opportunity cost of using the coupon for the Miami trip?A. $100B. $450C. $500D. $55053. If you use the frequent-flyer coupon to fly to Atlanta, would you get any economic surplus by making the trip?A. No, there is a loss of $50.B. Yes, surplus of $350.C. Yes, surplus of $400.D. Yes, surplus of $100.54. If the Chicago-Atlanta round-trip air fare is $350, should you go to Miami?A. No, there is a loss of $50.B. No, there is a loss of $100.C. Yes, there is economic surplus of $50.D. Yes, there is economic surplus of $400.55. Pat earns $25,000 per year (after taxes), and Pat's spouse, Chris, earns $35,000 (after taxes). They have two pre-school children. Childcare for their children costs $12,000 per year. Pat has decided to stay home and take care of the children. Pat must:A. value spending time with the children by more than $25,000.B. value spending time with the children by more than $12,000.C. value spending time with the children by more than $13,000.D. value spending time with the children as much as does Chris.You paid $35 for a ticket (which is non-refundable) to see SPAM, a local rock band, in concert on Saturday. (Assume that you would not have been willing to pay any more than $35 for this concert.) Your boss called and she is looking for someone to cover a shift on Saturday at the same time as the concert. You will have to work 4 hours and she will pay you time and a half, which is $9/hr.56. Should you go to the concert instead of working Saturday?A. Yes, your benefit is more than your cost.B. No, your benefit is less than your cost.C. Yes, your benefit is equal to your cost.D. No, because there are no benefits in the concert.57. What is the opportunity cost of going to the concert?A. $1B. $9C. $35D. $3658. What is your opportunity cost, if you go to work on Saturday?A. $0B. $9C. $35D. $3659. Your economic surplus of going to work on Saturday is:A. $0B. $1C. $35D. $36Matt has decided to purchase his textbooks for the semester. His options are to purchase the books via the Internet with next day delivery to his home at a cost of $175, or to drive to campus tomorrow to buy the books at the university bookstore at a cost of $170. Last week he drove to campus to buy a concert ticket because they offered 25 percent off the regular price of $16.因为他们提供75折的正常价格16美元。
微观经济学英文试卷
精品文档-可编辑内蒙古农业大学微观经济学课程测试试卷(A )P l e a s e p r i n t . I f t h e a n s w e r i s u n r e c o g n i z a b l e , i t w i l l b e c o u n t e d a s w r o n g a n s w e r .Y o u s h o u l d a n s w e r i n E n g l i s h o r C h i n e s e , n u m b e r s , o r g r a p h s .Ⅰ. C o n c e p t s (3 p o i n t s e a c h , t o t a l 15 p o i n t s )1. O p p o r t u n i t y c o s t2. E x t e r n a l i t y3. D e a d w e i g h t l o s s4. C o m p e t i t i v e m a r k e t5. D i m i n i s h i n g m a r g i n a l p r o d u c tⅡ. T r u e o r F a l s e Q u e s t i o n s (2 p o i n t s e a c h ,t o t a l 20 p o i n t s )( f ) 1.I f a p p l e a n d o r a n g e a r e s u b s t i t u t e s , w h e n p r i c e o f a p p l e i n c r e a s e s , t h e n t h e d e m a n d f o r o r a n g e d e c r e a s e s .(f)2.T h e p r i c e e l a s t i c i t y o f d e m a n d r e m a i n s c o n s t a n t a l o n g a l i n e a r d e m a n d c u r v e.(t)3.W h e n p r i c e c e i l i n g i s b e l o w e q u i l i b r i u m p r i c e i n a c o m p e t i t i v e m a r k e t,t h e p r i c e c e i l i n g i s b i n d i n g,a n d t h e r e i s s h o r t a g e i n t h e m a r k e t.(t)4.T o t a l s u r p l u s i s t h e v a l u e s t o b u y e r s m i n u s t h e c o s t t o s e l l e r s.(f)5.W h e n t a x e d i s l e v i e d o n t h e g o o d i n a c o m p e t i t i v e m a r k e t, t h e t a x r e v e n u e g o t b y t h e g o v e r n m e n t e q u a l s t h e f a l l i n p r o d u c e r a n d c o n s u m e r s u r p l u s.(f)6.I f t h e w o r l d p r i c e o f a g o o d e x c e e d s t h e d o m e s t i c p r i c e, t h e c o u n t r y s h o u l d i m p o r t t h e g o o d i n s t e a d t o e x p o r t i t. (t)7.I n t h e p r e s e n c e o f a n e g a t i v e e x t e r n a l i t y,Qi so p t i m u m.t h e r e f o r e l a r g e r t h a n t h e Qm a r k e t(f)8.P r i c e a l w a y s e q u a l s t o m a r g i n a l r e v e n u e f o r a l l k i n d s o f f i r m s.(t)9.D e m a n d c u r v e f o r a m o n o p o l y f i r m i s t h e m a r k e t d e m a n d c u r v e.(f)10.I n t h e l o n g r u n,m o n o p o l i s t i c c o m p e t i t i v e f i r m s p r o d u c e a t t h e i r l o w e s t a v e r a g e t o t a l c o s t.Ⅲ.S i n g l e C h o i c e Q u e s t i o n s(2p o i n t s e a c h,t o t a l20p o i n t s)(d)1.I f t h e c r o s s-p r i c e e l a s t i c i t y o f d e m a n d f o r t w o g o o d s i s n e g a t i v e,t h e s e t w o g o o d a r e?A.L u x u r y g o o d s.B.N e c e s s i t i e s.C.S u b s t i t u t e s.D.C o m p l e m e n t s.(a)2.A l t h o u g h b u y e r s a n d s e l l e r s s h a r e t h e b u r d e n o f t a x t o g e t h e r,s e l l e r s s h a r e m o r e i f t h e g o o d i s________A.F o o d.B.C l o t h e s.C.H o u s i n g.D.E n t e r t a i n m e n t g o o d.(c)3.C o n s u m e r s u r p l u s i s t h e a r e a____A.A b o v e t h e s u p p l y c u r v e a n d b e l o w t h e p r i c e.B.B e l o w t h e s u p p l y c u r v e a n d b e l o w t h e p r i c eC.B e l o w t h e d e m a n d c u r v e a n d a b o v e t h e p r i c eD.B e l o w t h e d e m a n d c u r v e a n d b e l o w t h e p r i c e(a)4.I f w e d o u b l e t h e s i z e o f t a x u n d e r t h e p e r f e c t l y c o m p e t i t i v e m a r k e t,s o t h e d e a d w e i g h t l o s s_____________A.I s f o u r t i m e s a s t h e o r i g i n a l o n e.B.I s t w i c e a s t h e o r i g i n a l o n e.C.R e m a i n t h e s a m eD.M a y i n c r e a s e o r d e c r e a s e.(b)5.W h i c h o f t h e f o l l o w i n g i t e m s i s a n e x a m p l e o f p u b l i c g o o d s?A.F i s h e s i n t h e o c e a n.B.N a t i o n a l d e f e n s e.C.A p p l e s o n a h o u s e h o l d’s a p p l e t r e e.D.H o t d o g s i n a p i c n i c.()6.I f t h e p r o d u c t i o n f u n c t i o n h a s t h e a t t r i b u t e o fd i m i n i s h i n g m a r g i n a l re t u r n s,t h e s l o p e of t h e t o t a l c o s t c u r v e w h i c h i s a s s o c i a t e d w i t h t h e p r o d u c t i o n f u n c t i o nA.I n c r e a s e s w h e n p r o d u c e d q u a n t i t y i n c r e a s eB.D e c r e a s e s w h e n p r o d u c e d q u a n t i t y i n c r e a s e.C.R e m a i n s t h e s a m e.D.M a y b e a n y o n e m e n t i o n e d a b o v e.(d)7.I f t h e m a r g i n a l c o s t c u r v e i s b e l o w t h e a v e r a g e t o t a l c o s t c u r v e,_________.A.A v e r a g e t o t a l c o s t i n c r e a s e s.B.A v e r a g e f i x e d c o s t i n c r e a s e s.C.A v e r a g e t o t a l c o s t a c h i e v e s i t s m i n i m u m.D.A v e r a g e t o t a l c o s t d e c r e a s e s.( b ) 8. I f a c o m p e t i t i v e f i r m a c h i e v e i t s l o n g -r u ne q u i l i b r i u m s t a t e ,A. I t s a v e r a g e t o t a l c o s t a c h i e v e s i t s m i n i m u m .B. M a r g i n a l c o s t e q u a l s m a r g i n a l r e v e n u e .C. I t g e t s z e r o e c o n o m i c p r o f i t .D. A l l t h e i t e m s m e n t i o n e d a b o v e a r e c o r r e c t .( a ) 9. T h e i n e f f i c i e n c y o f m o n o p o l y i s c a u s e d b y _______A. D e f i c i e n t p r o d u c t i o n o f m o n o p o l y .B. O v e r p r o d u c t i o n o f m o n o p o l y .C. M o n o p o l i s t i c p r o f i t .D. M o n o p o l i s t i c l o s s .( a ) 10.T h e m e a n i n g o f “m o n o p o l i s t i c ” i n “m o n o p o l i s t i c c o m p e t i t i o n ” i s ______A . m o n o p o l i s t i c c o m p e t i t i v e f i r m f a c e s a d o w n w a r d s l o p i n g d e m a n d c u r v e .B . m o n o p o l i s t i c c o m p e t i t i v e f i r m c a n f r e e l y e n t e r a n d e x i t t h e m a r k e t .C . m o n o p o l i s t i c c o m p e t i t i v e f i r m c h a r g e s t h e p r i c e a si t s m a r g i n a l c o s t .D . m o n o p o l i s t i c c o m p e t i t i v e f i r m p r o d u c e a t i t se f f i c i e n t s c a l e .Ⅳ. P r o b l e m s f o r c a l c u l a t i o n (t o t a l 20 p o i n t s )1. T h e m o n o p o l y ’s c o s t i s a f u n c t i o n o f i t s o u t p u t , w h i c h i sC(Q)=Q22+12,a n d t h e m o n o p o l y f a c e s t h e l i n e a r i n v e r s e d e m a n df u n c t i o n:P=24—Q(t o t a l10p o i n t s)(1)C a l c u l a t e f o l l o w i n g i t e m s:m a r g i n a l c o s t,a v e r a g e f i x e dc o s t,a v e r a g e v a r i a b l e c o s t,a v e r a g e t o t a l c o s t,a nd m a r g i n a l re v e n u e(5p o i n t s)(2)C a l c u l a t e p r o f i t-m a x i m i z i n g o u t p u t(2p o i n t s)a n d p r o f i t-m a x i m i z i n g p r i c e(1p o i n t),d e t e r m i n e i t s e c o n o m i c p r o f i t(2p o i n t s)2.T h e f o l l o w i n g i s t h e d e m a n d s c h e d u l e f o r c o n s u m e r s o f w a t c h i n g t w o i d e n t i c a l b a s e b a l l g a m e s i n a c i t y.T h e b a s e b a l l f i e l d a n d b a s e b a l l p l a y e r s f o r t h e s e t w o t e a m s a r e f r e e l y p r o v i d e d b y t h e b a s e b a l l l e a g u e(t o t a l10p o i n t s)(1)I f i t i s a p e r f e c t l y c o m p e t i t i v e m a r k e t,d e t e r m i n e t h e p r i c e a n d q u a n t i t y.(2p o i n t s)(2)I f t h e d u o p o l y m a k e s c o l l u s i o n t o b e c o m e a c a r t e l,d e t e r m i n e t h e p r i c e,q u a n t i t y a n d p r o f i t f o r e a c h f i r m i f t h e o n l y g o a l f o r t h e m i s p r o f i t m a x i m i z i n g.(3p o i n t s)(3)I f t h e y f a i l t o m a k e c o l l u s i o n,d e t e r m i n e t h e i r i n d i v i d u a l p r o f i t i f N a s h e q u i l i b r i u m i s a c h i e v e d.(3p o i n t s)(4)D r a w o u t t w o t e a m’s s t r a t e g i e s a b o u t t h e i r o u t p u t s a n d p r o f i t s(N o t e:U s e t h e c h a r t o f p r i s o n e r’d i l e m m a s h o w n i n o u r t e x t b o o k,p l e a s e).(2p o i n t s)Ⅴ.S h o r t a n s w e r s i t e m s(t o t a l25p o i n t s)1.W h y f i r m s i n a p e r f e c t l y c o m p e t i t i v e m a r k e t p r o d u c e a t t h e i re f f i c i e n t s c a l e s w h e n t h e y a c h i e v e t h e i r l o n g r u n e q u i l i b r i u m? (5p o i n t s)完全竞争厂商在长期内对全部生产要素的调整可以表现为两个方面:一方面表现为厂商进入或退出一个行业,这也就是行业内企业数量的调整;另一方面表现为厂商对生产规模的调整。
微观经济学英文版习题(附答案)5
4.) Explain why and how the credit demand function in capital markets with asymmetric information and a standard debt contract differs for the cases of moral hazard and adverse selection. Under adverse selection, investors fall into one of two risk categories, but can’t really affect the category they belong too. The only choice they have is to reveal or not reveal their risk status and they will do the latter when they benefit from doing so. In a pool with n1 low risk investors and n2 high risk investors, and participation constraints such that E(Π1)≥0 is violated at a lower interest rate than E(Π2)≥0, group 1 will leave the credit market when the interest rate has passed this level. Credit demand will fall from (n1+n2)K to n2K. This is illustrated in a staggered demand curve with two discrete segments. In case of moral hazard, investor risk depends on investor behaviour. Once the interest rate has risen to a level where the incentive compatibility for the low risk investment strategy (E(Π1)≥0) is violated, all investors switch to the high risk strategy with a larger pay-off in case of success. The total quantity of investment demand remains at (n1+n2)K, but its qualitative composition changes.
微观经济学的练习题以及答案英文版
微观经济学的练习题以及答案英文版Chapter 01Thinking Like an Economist Multiple Choice Questions1. Economics is best defined as the study of:A. prices and quantities.B. inflation and interest rates.C. how people make choices under the conditions of scarcity and the results of those choices.D. wages and incomes.2. Economic questions always deal with:A. financial matters.B. political matters.C. insufficient resources.D. choice in the face of limited resources.3. The range of topics or issues that fit within the definition of economics is:A. limited to market activities, e.g., buying soap.B. limited to individuals and firms.C. extremely wide, requiring only the ideas of choice and scarcity.D. very limited.4. The central concern of economics is:A. poverty.B. scarcity.C. wealth accumulation.D. overconsumption.5. The scarcity principle indicates that:A. no matter how much one has, it is never enough.B. compared to 100 years ago, individuals have less timetoday.C. with limited resources, having more of "this" means having less of "that."D. because tradeoffs must be made, resources are therefore scarce.6. The logical implication of the scarcity principle is that:A. one will never be satisfied with what one has.B. as wealth increases, making choices becomes less necessary.C. as wealth decreases, making choices becomes less necessary.D. choices must be made.7. If all the world's resources were to magically increase a hundredfold, then:A. the scarcity principle would still govern behavior.B. economics would no longer be relevant.C. the scarcity principle would disappear.D. tradeoffs would become unnecessary.8. The principle of scarcity applies to:A. the poor exclusively.B. all consumers.C. all firms.D. everyone—consumers, firms, governments, and nations.9. At the very least, Joe Average and Bill Gates are both identically limited by:A. their wealth.B. the 24 hours that comprise a day.C. their knowledge.D. their influence.10. Forest is a mountain man living in complete isolation inMontana. He is completely self-sufficient through hunting, fishing, and farming. He has not been in the city to buy anything in five years. One can infer:A. the scarcity principle does not apply to Forest.B. Forest is not required to make choices.C. the scarcity principle still applies because more hunting means less fishing and farming.D. Forest is very satisfied.11. The scarcity principle applies to:A. all decisions.B. only market decisions, e.g., buying a car.C. only non-market decisions, e.g., watching a sunset.D. only the poor.12. Chris has a one-hour break between classes every Wednesday. Chris can either stay at the library and study or go to the gym and work out. The decision Chris must make is:A. not an economic problem because neither one costs money.B. not an economic problem because it's an hour that is wasted no matter what Chris does.C. an economic problem because the tuition Chris pays covers both the gym and the library.D. an economic problem because Chris has only one hour during which he can study or work out.13. Josh wants to go to the football game this weekend, but he has a paper due on Monday. It will take him the whole weekend to write the paper. Josh decided to stay home and work on the paper. According to the scarcity principle, the reason Josh didn't go to the game is that:A. Josh prefers schoolwork to football games.B. writing the paper is easier than going to the game.C. Josh doesn't have enough time for writing the paper and going to the game.D. it's too expensive to go to the game.14. Whether studying the size of the U.S. economy or the number of children a couple will choose to have, the unifying concept is that wants are:A. limited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.B. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.C. unlimited, resources are limited to some but not to others, and thus some people must make choices.D. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus government needs to do more.15. The cost-benefit principle indicates that an action should be taken:A. if the total benefits exceed the total costs.B. if the average benefits exceed the average costs.C. if the net benefit (benefit minus cost) is zero.D. if the extra benefit is greater than or equal to the extra costs.16. When a person decides to pursue an activity as long as the extra benefits are at least equal to the extra costs, that person is:A. violating the cost-benefit principle.B. following the scarcity principle.C. following the cost-benefit principle.D. pursuing the activity too long.17. Choosing to study for an exam until the extra benefit(improved score) equals the extra cost (mental fatigue) is:A. not rational.B. an application of the cost-benefit principle.C. an application of the scarcity principle.D. the relevant opportunity cost.18. The scarcity principle tells us that __________, and the cost-benefit principle tells us __________.A. choices must be made; how to make the choicesB. choices must be made; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choicesC. rare goods are expensive; that the costs should outweigh the benefits of the choicesD. rare goods are expensive; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choices19. According to the cost-benefit principle:A. the lowest cost activity usually gives the lowest benefit.B. a person should always choose the activity with the lowest cost.C. a person should always choose the activity with the greatest benefit.D. the extra costs and benefits of an activity are more important considerations than the total costs and benefits.。
微观经济学的练习题以及答案英文版
Chapter 01Thinking Like an Economist Multiple Choice Questions1. Economics is best defined as the study of: A. prices and quantities.B. inflation and interest rates.C. how people make choices under the conditions of scarcity and the results of those choices.D. wages and incomes.2. Economic questions always deal with: A. financial matters.B. political matters.C. insufficient resources.D. choice in the face of limited resources.3. The range of topics or issues that fit within the definition of economicsis: A. limited to market activities, e.g., buying soap.B. limited to individuals and firms.C. extremely wide, requiring only the ideas of choice and scarcity.D. very limited.4. The central concern of economics is: A. poverty.B. scarcity.C. wealth accumulation.D. overconsumption.5. The scarcity principle indicates that: A. no matter how much one has, it is never enough.B. compared to 100 years ago, individuals have less time today.C. with limited resources, having more of "this" means having less of "that."D. because tradeoffs must be made, resources are therefore scarce.6. The logical implication of the scarcity principle is that: A. one will never be satisfied with what one has.B. as wealth increases, making choices becomes less necessary.C. as wealth decreases, making choices becomes lessnecessary.D. choices must be made.7. If all the world's resources were to magically increase a hundredfold,then: A. the scarcity principle would still govern behavior.B. economics would no longer be relevant.C. the scarcity principle would disappear.D. tradeoffs would become unnecessary.8. The principle of scarcity applies to: A. the poor exclusively.B. all consumers.C. all firms.D. everyone—consumers, firms, governments, and nations.9. At the very least, Joe Average and Bill Gates are both identically limited by: A. their wealth.B. the 24 hours that comprise a day.C. theirknowledge.D. their influence.10. Forest is a mountain man living in complete isolation in Montana. He is completely self-sufficient through hunting, fishing, and farming. He has not been in the city to buy anything in five years. One can infer: A. the scarcity principle does not apply to Forest.B. Forest is not required to make choices.C. the scarcity principle still applies because more hunting means less fishing andfarming.D. Forest is very satisfied.11. The scarcity principle applies to: A. all decisions.B. only market decisions,e.g., buying a car.C. only non-market decisions, e.g., watching a sunset.D. only the poor.12. Chris has a one-hour break between classes every Wednesday. Chris can either stay at the library and study or go to the gym and work out. The decision Chris must make is: A. not an economic problem because neither one costs money.B. not an economic problem because it's an hour that is wasted no matter what Chris does.C. an economic problem because the tuition Chris pays covers both the gym and the library.D. an economic problem because Chris has only one hour during which he can study or work out.13. Josh wants to go to the football game this weekend, but he has a paper due on Monday. It will take him the whole weekend to write the paper. Josh decided to stay home and work on the paper. According to the scarcity principle, the reason Josh didn't go to the game is that: A. Josh prefers schoolwork to football games.B. writing the paper is easier than going to the game.C. Josh doesn't have enough time for writing the paper and going to the game.D. it's too expensive to go to the game.14. Whether studying the size of the U.S. economy or the number of children a couple will choose to have, the unifying concept is that wants are: A. limited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.B. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.C. unlimited, resources are limited to some but not to others, and thus some people must make choices.D. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus government needs to do more.15. The cost-benefit principle indicates that an action should be taken: A. if the total benefits exceed the total costs.B. if the average benefits exceed the average costs.C. if the net benefit (benefit minus cost) is zero.D. if the extra benefit is greater than or equal to the extra costs.16. When a person decides to pursue an activity as long as the extra benefits are at least equal to the extra costs, that person is: A. violating the cost-benefit principle.B. following the scarcity principle.C. following the cost-benefit principle.D. pursuing the activity too long.17. Choosing to study for an exam until the extra benefit (improved score) equals the extra cost (mental fatigue) is: A. not rational.B. an application of thecost-benefit principle.C. an application of the scarcity principle.D. the relevant opportunity cost.18. The scarcity principle tells us that __________, and the cost-benefit principle tells us __________. A. choices must be made; how to make thechoicesB. choices must be made; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choicesC. rare goods are expensive; that the costs should outweigh the benefits of the choicesD. rare goods are expensive; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choices19. According to the cost-benefit principle: A. the lowest cost activity usually gives the lowest benefit.B. a person should always choose the activity with the lowest cost.C. a person should always choose the activity with the greatest benefit.D. the extra costs and benefits of an activity are more important considerations than the total costs and benefits.20. A rational person is one who: A. is reasonable.B. makes choices that are easily understood.C. possesses well-defined goals and seeks to achieve them.D. is highly cynical.21. The seventh glass of soda that Tim consumes will produce an extra benefit of 10 cents and has an extra cost of zero (Tim is eating at the cafeteria). Thecost-benefit principle predicts that Tim will: A. realize he has had too much soda to drink and go home.B. drink the seventh glass and continue until the marginal benefit of drinking another glass of soda is zero.C. volunteer to empty out the fountain.D. not drink the seventh glass.22. Janie must either mow the lawn or wash clothes, earning her a benefit of $30 or $45, respectively. She dislikes both equally and they both take the same amount of time. Janie will therefore choose to _________ because the economic surplus is ________. A. mow the lawn; greaterB. wash clothes; greaterC. mow the lawn; smallerD. wash clothes; smaller23. Dean decided to play golf rather than prepare for tomorrow's exam in economics. One can infer that: A. Dean has made an irrational choice.B. Dean is doing poorly in his economics class.C. the economic surplus from playing golf exceeded the surplus from studying.D. the cost of studying was less than the cost of golfing.Larry was accepted at three different graduate schools, and must choose one. Elite U costs $50,000 per year and did not offer Larry any financial aid. Larry values attending Elite U at $60,000 per year. State College costs $30,000 per year, and offered Larry an annual $10,000 scholarship. Larry values attending State College at $40,000 per year. NoName U costs $20,000 per year, and offered Larry a full $20,000 annual scholarship. Larry values attending NoName at $15,000 per year.24. The opportunity cost of attending Elite Uis: A. $50,000B. $10,000C. $20,000D. $15,00025. The opportunity cost of attending State Collegeis: A. $30,000B. $20,000C. $15,000D. $10,00026. Larry maximizes his surplus by attending: A. Elite U, because $60,000 is greater than the benefit at the other schools.B. State College, because the difference between the benefit and cost is greatest there.C. NoName U, because Larry has a full scholarship there.D. Elite U, because the opportunity costs of attending Elite U are the lowest.27. Larry has decided to go to Elite U. Assuming that all of the values described are correct, for Larry to decide on Elite U, he must have: A. calculated his surplus from each choice and picked the one with the highest surplus.B. underestimated the benefits of attending NoName.C. miscalculated the surplus of attending Elite U.D. determined the opportunity cost of each choice and picked the one with the lowest opportunity cost.28. Jen spends her afternoon at the beach, paying $1 to rent a beach umbrella and $11 for food and drinks rather than spending an equal amount of money to go to a movie. The opportunity cost of going to the beach is: A. the $12 she spent on the umbrella, food and drinks.B. only $1 because she would have spent the money on food and drinks whether or not she went to the beach.C. the movie she missed seeing.D. the movie she missed seeing plus the $12 she spent on the umbrella, food and drinks.29. Relative to a person who earns minimum wage, a person who earns $30 per hour has: A. a lower opportunity cost of working longer hours.B. a higher opportunity cost of taking a day off.C. a lower opportunity cost of driving farther to work.D. the same opportunity cost of spending time on leisure activities.30. The opportunity cost of an activity is the value of: A. an alternative forgone.B. the next-best alternative forgone.C. the least-best alternative forgone.D. the difference between the chosen activity and the next-best alternative forgone.31. Amy is thinking about going to the movies tonight. A ticket costs $7 and she will have to cancel her dog-sitting job that pays $30. The cost of seeing the movie is: A. $7.B. $30.C. $37.D. $37 minus the benefit of seeing the movie.32. Economic surplus is: A. the benefit gained by taking an action.B. the price paid to take an action.C. the difference between the benefit gained and the cost incurred of taking an action.D. the wage someone would have to earn in order to take an action.33. The Governor of your state has cut the budget for the University and increased spending on Medicaid. This is an example of: A. the pitfalls of considering average costs instead of marginal costs.B. poor normative economic decision making.C. poor positive economic decision making.D. choice in the face of limited resources.34. Sally earned $25,000 per year before she became a mother. After she becamea mother, she told her employer that her opportunity cost of working is now $50,000, and so she is not willing to work for anything less. Her decision is based on: A. the high cost of raising a child.B. her desire to save for her child's college expenses.C. her increased value to her employer.D. the value she places on spending time with her child.35. Alex received a four-year scholarship to State U. that covered tuition and fees, room and board, and books and supplies. As a result: A. attending State U. for four years is costless for Alex.B. Alex has no incentive to work hard while at State U.C. the cost of attending State U. is the amount of money Alex could have earned working for four years.D. the cost of attending State U. is the sum of the benefits Alex would have had attending each of the four other schools to which Alex had been admitted.36. Suppose Mary is willing to pay up to $15,000 for a used Ford pick-up truck, but she finds one for $12,000. Her __________ is __________. A. benefit; $12,000B. cost; $15,000C. economic surplus; $3,000D. economic surplus; $12,00037. In general, rational decision making requires one to choose the actions that yield the: A. largest total benefits.B. smallest total costs.C. smallest net benefits.D. largest economic surpluses.38. Suppose the most you would be willing to pay for a plane ticket home is $250, but you buy one online for $175. The economic surplus of buying the online ticket is: A. $175.B. $250.C. $75.D. $0.39. The use of economic models, like the cost-benefit principle, means economists believe that: A. this is exactly how people choose between alternatives.B. this is a reasonable abstraction of how people choose between alternatives.C. those who explicitly make decisions this way are smarter.D. with enough education, all people will start to explicitly make decisions this way.40. Jenna decides to see a movie that costs $7 for the ticket and has an opportunity cost of $20. After the movie, she says to one of her friends that the movie was not worth it. Apparently: A. Jenna failed to apply the cost-benefit model to her decision.B. Jenna was not rational.C. Jenna overestimated the benefits of the movie.D. Jenna underestimated the benefits of the movie.41. Most of us make sensible decisions most of the time, because: A. we know the cost-benefit principle.B. subconsciously we are weighing costs andbenefits.C. most people know about the scarcity principle.D. we conduct hypothetical mental auctions when we make decisions.42. Suppose a person makes a choice that seems inconsistent with the cost-benefit principle. Which of the following statements represents the most reasonable conclusion to draw? A. The person (explicitly or implicitly) over-estimated the benefits or under-estimated the costs or both.B. The cost-benefit principle is rarely true.C. The person does not grasp how decisions should be made.D. The person is simply irrational.43. Economic models are intended to: A. apply to all examples equallywell.B. eliminate differences in the way people behave.C. generalize about patterns in decision-making.D. distinguish economics students from everyone else.44. Economic models claim to be: A. reasonable abstractions of how people make choices, highlighting the most important factors.B. exact replications of the decision-making process people use.C. interesting chalkboard exercises with little applicability to the real world.D. exceptionally accurate methods of predicting nearly all behavior of everyone.45. The cost-benefit model used by economists is: A. unrealistic because it is too detailed and specific to apply to a variety of situations.B. unrealistic because everyone can think of times when he or she violated the principle.C. useful because everyone follows it all of the time.D. useful because most people follow it most of the time.46. Barry owns a clothing store in the mall and has asked two economic consultants to develop models of consumer behavior that he can use to increase sales. Barry should choose the model that: A. does not include simplifying assumptions.B. is the most detailed and complex.C. assumes that consumers apply the cost-benefit principle.D. predicts that consumers will always prefer Barry's store to the competing stores.47. Economists use abstract models because: A. every economic situation is unique, so it is impossible to make generalizations.B. every economic situation is essentially the same, so specific details are unnecessary.C. they are useful for describing general patterns of behavior.D. computers have allowed economists to develop abstract models.48. Most people make some decisions based on intuition rather than calculation. This is: A. irrational, because intuition is often wrong.B. consistent with the economic model of decision-making, because calculating costs and benefits leads to decision-making pitfalls.C. consistent with the economic model because people intuitively compare the relative costs and benefits of the choices they face.D. inconsistent with the economic model, but rational because intuition takes into account non-financial considerations.49. Moe has a big exam tomorrow. He considered studying this evening, but decided to go out with Curly instead. Since Moe always chooses rationally, it must be true that: A. the opportunity cost of studying tonight is less than the value Moe gets from spending time with Curly.B. the opportunity cost of studying tonight is equal to the value Moe gets from spending time with Curly minus the cost of earning a low grade on the exam.C. Moe gets more benefit from spending time with Curly than from studying.D. Moe gets less benefit from spending time with Curly than from studying.50. If one fails to account for implicit costs in decision making, then applying the cost-benefit rule will be flawed because: A. the benefits will be overstated.B. the costs will be understated.C. the benefits will be understated.D. the costs will be overstated.Your classmates from the University of Chicago are planning to go to Miami for spring break, and you are undecided about whether you should go with them. The round-trip airfares are $600, but you have a frequent-flyer coupon worth $500 that you could use to pay part of the airfare. All other costs for the vacation are exactly $900. The most you would be willing to pay for the trip is $1400. Your only alternative use for your frequent-flyer coupon is for your trip to Atlanta two weeks after the break to attend your sister's graduation, which your parents are forcing you to attend. The Chicago-Atlanta round-trip airfares are $450.51. If you do not use the frequent-flyer coupon to fly, should you go to Miami? A. Yes, your benefit is more than your cost.B. No, your benefit is less than your cost.C. Yes, your benefit is equal to your cost.D. No, because there are no benefits in the trip.52. What is the opportunity cost of using the coupon for the Miamitrip? A. $100B. $450C. $500D. $55053. If you use the frequent-flyer coupon to fly to Atlanta, would you get any economic surplus by making the trip? A. No, there is a loss of $50.B. Yes, surplus of $350.C. Yes, surplus of $400.D. Yes, surplus of $100.54. If the Chicago-Atlanta round-trip air fare is $350, should you go to Miami? A. No, there is a loss of $50.B. No, there is a loss of $100.C. Yes, there is economic surplus of $50.D. Yes, there is economic surplus of $400.55. Pat earns $25,000 per year (after taxes), and Pat's spouse, Chris, earns $35,000 (after taxes). They have two pre-school children. Childcare for their children costs $12,000 per year. Pat has decided to stay home and take care of the children. Pat must: A. value spending time with the children by more than $25,000.B. value spending time with the children by more than $12,000.C. value spending time with the children by more than $13,000.D. value spending time with the children as much as does Chris.You paid $35 for a ticket (which is non-refundable) to see SPAM, a local rock band, in concert on Saturday. (Assume that you would not have been willing to pay any more than $35 for this concert.) Your boss called and she is looking for someone to cover a shift on Saturday at the same time as the concert. You will have to work 4 hours and she will pay you time and a half, which is $9/hr.56. Should you go to the concert instead of working Saturday? A. Yes, your benefit is more than your cost.B. No, your benefit is less than your cost.C. Yes, your benefit is equal to your cost.D. No, because there are no benefits in the concert.57. What is the opportunity cost of going to the concert? A. $1B. $9C. $35D. $3658. What is your opportunity cost, if you go to work onSaturday? A. $0B. $9C. $35D. $3659. Your economic surplus of going to work on Saturdayis: A. $0B. $1C. $35D. $36Matt has decided to purchase his textbooks for the semester. His options are to purchase the books via the Internet with next day delivery to his home at a cost of $175, or to drive to campus tomorrow to buy the books at the university bookstore at a cost of $170. Last week he drove to campus to buy a concert ticket because they offered 25 percent off the regular price of $16.因为他们提供75折的正常价格16美元。
微观经济学英文版习题(附答案)4
ECON915, Seminar 4Attempt all of the following questions.1.) Assume that in a credit market with standard debt contracts, there are two groups of investors. Low risk investors (group 1) have a success probability of p 1=0.8 and a return of $150 on a successful investment of K=100, yielding an expected return of E(R 1)=0.8($150)+0.2($100)=$140. Assume further that the same amount of K=$100 is invested by either group and assuming further that 10 investors are present in either group. Based on the above, state what rate of return on successful investments, high risk investors would have to achieve in order to match the expected return of $140 if their success probability is p 2=0.6 .The expected return on a high risk investment is:E(R):= 140 = 0.6x+0.4(100), which can easily be solved for x:140=0.6x + 400.6x=140-40=100x=100/0.6=166.667=R 2, R 2/K=1.672.) Against the data provided above in Q1, what is the highest rate of return that could be achieved without violating the participation constraint for low and high risk investors respectively?The participation constraint in either case is E(Πi )>=0 which essentially implies that R S >=r. The maximum value is obtained for the point where the constraint holds with equality. So, for low risk investors we have:E(Π1)=0.8(150-100-100r) which yields 100r = 50, so r = 50/100 =0.5.This yields the following rate of return:%3535.0)7.0(5.020)10(6.0)10(8.05.0≈==+=Max ρ So the highest interest rate that can be reconciled with the low risk participation constraint is 50%. This yields a rate of return of 35% to the banking sector, because the interest rate is charged to a mixed pool of high and low risk investors.Likewise, for high risk investors we have E(Π2)=0.6(166.67-100-100r) which yields 100r = 66.67, so r = 0.67 and:()40.06.067.02,==Max ρwhich is just the expected rate of return for high risk investors.3.) Against the background of questions 1 and 2, compute which rates of return would be obtained by interest rates of r = 48%, 53% and 66% respectively.r = 48% would not yet violate low risk investors' participation constraint so:%6.33 i.e. ,34.0)7.0(48.020)10(6.0)10(8.048.0==+=A ρ For interest rates of r=53% and 66% low risk investors' participation constraint is violated, so:ρB = 0.53*0.6=0.312, i.e. 31.2%ρC = 0.66*0.6=0.396, i.e. 39.6%Note that r B >r A and yet ρB <ρA !。
微观经济学英文版1-8章自测题及答案
微观经济学英⽂版1-8章⾃测题及答案第⼀章1. Beth’s friends want to take her to a movie or a play for her birthday. Beth chooses to attend the play. We know that:a. Beth has made an irrational decision.b. not seeing the movie is Beth’s opportunity cost of attending the play.c. Beth did not make a decision at the margin.d. seeing the play did not cost Beth anything since she did not have to pay for the ticket.2. A market economy relies ona. decentralized choices coordinated by Adam Smith’s “invisible hand.”b. centralized choices coordin ated by Adam Smith’s “invisible hand.”c. decentralized choices coordinated by the “visible hand” of authority.d. centralized choices coordinated by the “visible hand” of authority.3. Which of the following is an example of market power?a. Elaine engages in less research than she would if the government were to subsidize her research activities.b. Mark’s company charges a higher price for its product because government regulations force the company to clean-up its emissions into a local waterway.c. Because of the high cost of gasoline, Jennifer buys a smaller, more fuel-efficient car.d. The town’s only cable company charges a higher price than it would if it faced competition from other firms.4. Government regulation of the economy may be beneficial if:a. externalities exist.b. there is too much competition.c. there is no market power.d. special interest groups act to influence government policy.5. Which of the following variables is the key ingredient in improving the standard of living of the average citizen?a. low inflationb. low unemployment ratesc. productivity increasesd. population growth6. Externalities occur whena. one person’s actions affect the well-being of a bystander.b. the government imposes taxes.c. increases in the price of oil cause gasoline prices to rise.d. higher wages result in increased spending.7. Which of the following are NOT examples of market failure?b. BUU is the sole provider of long-distance for the United States.c. As a result of its production processes, REA Corporation emits two tons of air pollutants daily.d. None of the above.8. Government intervention in the marketplacea. always benefits society.b. always harms society.c. may either benefit or harm society depending on the type and extent of government intervention.d. is rarely influenced by political considerations.9. Trade between two countriesa. makes both countries better off.b. can benefit one country but not both.c. causes one country to gain and the other country to lose.d. is a zero-sum game.10. Inflation refers toa. a continuing decrease in the overall level of prices in the economy.b. an increase in the overall level of prices in the economy.c. a persistent increase in the amount of goods which can be purchased with a given amount of money.d. an increase in some individual prices in the economy.11. In most cases, high or persistent inflation is caused by:a. too rapid growth in the quantity of money.b. a reduction in the quantity of money.c. an increase in unemployment.d. an increase in productivity.12. To say that people make decisions at the margin means that theya. wait until the last minute before making a decision.b. weigh the additional costs and additional benefits of small changes.c. make decisions that determine whether or not they will live their lives on the edge of subsistence.d. make decisions on issues that are relatively unimportant for their economic well-being.13. According to the Phillips curve,a. there is no tradeoff between inflation and unemployment.b. if inflation increases, so does unemployment.c. increases in unemployment are associated with a rise in prices.14. When economists say that individuals respond to incentives, they mean thata. if the benefit of an activity increases, people will engage in more of that activity.b. once individuals have made a mistake, they will never make the same mistake again.c. individuals act very quickly when faced with a problem.d. individuals respond to positive stimuli, but not to negative stimuli.15. Economics is primarily the study ofa. how to make money in the stock market.b. how to operate a business successfully.c. how society manages its scarce resources.d. the methods that government might use to transform a scarce good into an economic good.16. What ever must be given up to obtain some item isa. an explicit cost.b. an opportunity cost.c. an historical cost.d. an accounting cost.17. Scarcity arises because ofa. limited resources.b. poverty.c. too little money in an economy.d. government inefficiencies.18. “There is no such thing as a free lunch.” This expression meansa. no decision is cost-free.b. if Jan and Jim go out to eat lunch, one of them must pay for the lunch or the restaurant will call the police.c. while some actions involve a cost, others do not.d. that scarcity exists in some situations, but does not in others.参考答案:1.b2.a3.d4.a5.c6.a7.d8.c11.a 12.b 13.d 14.a 15.c 16.b 17.a 18.a第⼆章1. Economists use assumptionsa. to make the real world easier to understand.b. to make their models more accurately reflect the real world.c. to make their models more complex.d. to make it more difficult to understand how the real world operates.2. Which of the following is an example of a normative economic statement?a. If the economy is experiencing full employment, a large tax cut will create inflation.b. An increase in the government’s budget deficit will cause an increase in interest rates.c. A decrease in the minimum wage will decrease unemployment among teens.d. The federal government should increase spending on education.3. A technological advance or an increase in the factors of production is represented asa. a shift of the production possibilities frontier in towards the origin.b. a shift of the production possibilities frontier away from the origin.c. a movement down the production possibilities frontier.d. a movement up the production possibilities frontier.4. Microeconomics is the study ofa. how households and firms make decisions and how they interact in the market.b. economy-wide phenomena.c. inflation, unemployment, and economic growth.d. the impact of government actions on the economy.5. Macroeconomics is concerned primarily witha. the way things are produced.b. the prices of particular goods and services.c. the behavior of consumers.d. the study of economy-wide phenomena.6. According to the circular flow modela. in the market for goods and services, households are buyers and firms are sellers.b. the market for goods and services, households are sellers and firms are buyers.c. in the market for factors of production, households are buyers and firms are sellers.d. firms are the owners of the factors of production.7. A production possibilities frontier showsa. the prices at which alternative goods will be produced.c. the tax revenue a government receives at various tax rates.d. the various combinations of two goods a country can produce with its factors of production and the available production technology.8. Which of the following is a statement of positive economics?a. Income taxes should be reduced in order to increase economic growth.b. A reduction in tax rates will increase the after-tax incomes of the rich.c. Tax rates ought to be reduced so that people will work more.d. All people who are on welfare for more than 24 months should be required to work.9. In the circular-flow model, households receive income in the form of:a. wages only.b. wages and rent.c. wages and rent and profit.d. rent only.10. A good economic model such as supply and demand is like a road map becausea. it omits many details to allow us to use only pertinent information.b. it accurately depicts all the details of the real-world.c. it is complex enough that only those with high intellect can understand it.d. it makes little use of assumptions.参考答案:1.a2.d3.b4.a5.d6.a7.d8.b9.c 10.a第三章1. Mary can produce housing at a lower opportunity cost than Joan. Economists would say thata. Mary has the comparative advantage in the production of housing.b. Joan has the comparative advantage in the production of housing.c. Mary has the absolute advantage in the production of housing.d. Joan has the absolute advantage in the production of housing.2. When trade takes placeb. one pa rty must gain at the other party’s expense.c. both parties can be better off.d. one party will gain and the other party will be neither better nor worse off.3. The average worker in the United States can produce 20 tons of coal or 10 tons of iron per hour. The average worker in Canada can produce either 10 tons of coal or 10 tons of iron per hour. The United States has a comparative advantage in the production ofa. iron.b. coal.c. both iron and coal.d. neither iron nor coal.4. If Brazil can produce more shoes with one hour of labor than Argentina, which of the following is necessarily true?a. Brazil has a comparative advantage in the production of shoes.b. Brazil exports shoes to Argentina if there is free trade.c. Brazil has an absolute advantage in the production of shoes.d. All of the above are true.5. Comparative advantage describes the situation wherea. one producer has more resources than another producer.b. a producer produces more output than another producer.c. the opportunity cost of producing a good is smaller for one producer than for a second producer.d. the opportunity cost of producing a good is the same for both producers.6. With trade, a country’s set of consumption opportunities liesa. inside the production possibility frontier.b. outside the production possibility frontier.c. at the same point as the production possibility frontier.d. inside the production possibilities frontier at some points and on the production possibilities frontier at other points.7. In France each unit of labor can produce 3 bottles of wine or 2 shirts. In Portugal each unit of labor can produce 2 bottles of wine or 1 shirt. Which country has a comparative advantage in producing wine?a. Franceb. Portugalc. Both France and Portugal.d. Neither France nor Portugal.8. If Argentina produces shirts with a smaller sacrifice of shoes than Brazil,a. Argentina has an absolute advantage in shirt production.b. Brazil has an absolute advantage in shirt production.9. A country should specialize in the production of those goodsa. that have the highest price.b. that use the most labor.c. for which a country has an absolute advantage.d. for which a country has a comparative advantage.10. Which of the following is true when countries specialize according to their comparative advantage?a. It is possible to increase world output of all goods.b. It is possible to increase world output of some goods only by reducing the output of others.c. One country is likely to gain from trade while others lose.d. All countries will lose from trade.参考答案:1.a2.c3.b4.c5.c6.b7.b8.d9.d 10.a第四章1. Which of the following is a characteristic of perfect competition?a. A single seller.b. A small number of buyers.c. Buyers and sellers are price setters.d. Buyers and sellers are price takers.2. A decrease in the price of pizza willa. decrease the quantity of pizza demanded.b. increase the quantity of pizza demanded.c. decrease the demand for pizza.d. increase the demand for pizza.3. When income increases, purchases of houses increase. This meansb. there has been a movement down the demand curve for housing.c. the demand curve for housing has shifted leftward.d. there has been a movement up the demand curve for housing.4. Suppose oranges are currently selling for $2.00 per pound. The equilibrium price of oranges is $1.56 per pound. We would expecta. a shortage to exist and the market price of oranges to increase.b. a shortage to exist and the market price of oranges to decrease.c. a surplus to exist and the market price of oranges to increase.d. a surplus to exist and the market price of oranges to decrease.5. Suppose the price of Coke increases. What would happen to the equilibrium price and quantity of Pepsi?a. Both the equilibrium price and quantity of Pepsi would increase.b. Both the equilibrium price and quantity of Pepsi would decrease.c. The equilibrium price of Pepsi would increase, and the equilibrium quantity of Pepsi would decrease.d. The equilibrium price of Pepsi would decrease, and the equilibrium quantity of Pepsi would increase.6. Suppose there is an advance in technology that allows the automobile industry to manufacture automobiles more cheaply. We would expecta. an increase in both the equilibrium price and the equilibrium quantity of automobiles.b. a decrease in both the equilibrium price and the equilibrium quantity of automobiles.c. an increase in the equilibrium price and a decrease in equilibrium quantity of automobiles.d. a decrease in the equilibrium price and an increase in the equilibrium quantity of automobiles.7. When both supply and demand increasea. equilibrium price rises, and so does equilibrium quantity.b. equilibrium price falls, but equilibrium quantity rises.c. equilibrium quantity rises.d. it is impossible to speculate about the results for equilibrium price or equilibrium quantity.8. Because cars and gasoline are complements, an increase in the price of gasoline willa. increase the demand for cars.b. decrease the demand for cars.c. increase the demand for gasoline.d. decrease the demand for gasoline.9. A change in which of the following will cause a movement along the supply curve?b. a change in taxesc. a change in expectations about future pricesd. a change in the price of the good10. Suppose the price of land increases. At the same time, income increases. What would happen to the equilibrium price and quantity of housing?a. Equilibrium price will decrease. We cannot predict what will happen to equilibrium quantity.b. Equilibrium price will increase. We cannot predict what will happen to equilibrium quantity.c. Equilibrium quantity will decrease. We cannot predict what will happen to equilibrium price.d. Equilibrium quantity will increase. We cannot predict what will happen to equilibrium price.参考答案:1.d2.b3.a4.d5.a6.d7.c8.b9.d 10.b第五章1. Which of the following statements is correct?a. The demand for luxuries tends to be more elastic than the demand for necessities.Correct. Demand for luxuries can be more sensitive to price changes.b. If there are no close substitutes for a good, demand will be very elastic.c. The shorter the time period, the more elastic is demand.d. Ho w a good’s market is defined has no impact on the good’s elasticity.2. If the quantity of movie tickets sold decreases by 20 percent when the price increases by 10 percent, demand over this price range is:a. inelastic.b. elastic.c. perfectly inelastic.3. Given that the demand for cocaine is inelastic, how will a reduction in supply affect totalrevenue of those selling this drug (other things equal)?a. Total revenue will rise.b. Total revenue will fall.c. Total revenue will not change.d. The effect on total revenue cannot be predicted.4. The local movie theater lowers admission prices in an attempt to increase its revenues. The managers of the theater must believe demand to bea. unit price elastic.b. perfectly price inelastic.c. price elastic.d. price inelastic.5. The income elasticity of demand for good X is estimated to be -0.5. This suggests that good X isa. a complementary good.b. a substitute good.c. a normal good.d. an inferior good.6. Suppose the cross-price elasticity of demand is a negative number. We know thata. the two goods are complements.b. the two goods are substitutes.c. the two goods are inferior goods.d. the two goods are normal goods.7. If the percentage change in the quantity supplied of a good is less than the percentage change in price, then supply of the good isa. elastic.b. inelastic.c. normal.d. inferior.8. Suppose the supply curve for a good is vertical. We know that supply isa. price elastic.b. perfectly price inelastic.d. perfectly price elastic.9. If the price of one dozen eggs increases from $1.60 to $2.00, quantity demanded will decrease from 600 to 400. The elasticity of demand for eggs (using the mid-point formula) isa. 0.8.b. 1.8.c. 11.26.d. 1.9.10. The cross-price elasticity of Toyotas and Nissans is a positive number. This would indicate that Toyotas and Nissans area. substitutes.b. complements.c. luxuries.d. necessities.参考答案:1.a2.b3.a4.c5.d6.a7.b8.b9.b 10.a第六章1. A shortage will occur ifa. a price ceiling is set above the equilibrium price.b. a price ceiling is set below the equilibrium price.c. a price floor is set above the equilibrium price.d. a price floor is set below the equilibrium price.2. If the government establishes a legal price floor for a good, the result will be a(n):a. shortage of the good, but only if the floor is equal to the equilibrium price.b. surplus of the good, but only if the floor is above the equilibrium price.c. surplus of the good, but only if the floor is below the equilibrium price.d. shortage of the good, but only if the floor is above the equilibrium price.3. If a price ceiling above the equilibrium price is imposed on gasoline, which of the following will result?a. There will be a surplus of gasoline.b. The quantity demanded will exceed the quantity supplied.c. The quantity supplied will exceed the quantity demanded.d. The quantity of gasoline demanded will equal the quantity of gasoline supplied.4. A price ceiling isa. a legal maximum price at which a good can be sold.b. a legal minimum price at which a good can be sold.c. typically equal to the equilibrium price of a good.d. a price set by government that varies with market conditions.5. A wage is the price for labor. A minimum wage set above equilibrium wage would be an example of:a. a price ceiling.b. a price floor.c. a gap in prices or wages.d. a wage settlement.6. Tax incidence deals witha. the level of taxable income.b. the level of taxation on sales.c. the dollar amount of incidental taxes.d. who bears the burden of a tax.7. Sellers pay more of a tax imposed on a good whena. the demand for the good is more inelastic.b. the supply of the good is more elastic.c. the supply of the good is less elastic.d. the supply of and the demand for the good have the same elasticity.8. Assume the government wants to impose a tax on wine. It wants to minimize the negative impact the tax has on consumers in the form of higher prices. It will achieve this goal ifa. demand is relatively elastic.b. demand is relatively inelastic.c. supply is relatively elastic.d. the supply curve and the demand curve for wine have the same elasticity.9. If the tax on bottled water were raised by $1 per bottle, we would expecta. buyers to bear the entire tax in the form of higher prices.b. sellers to bear the tax in the form of lower prices.c. part of the tax to fall on buyers in the form of higher prices, and part of the tax to fall on sellers in the form of lower prices.d. government revenues to fall.10. A law requiring sellers to pay the government a tax on cigarettes has the effect ofa. shifting the supply curve to the right.b. changing the slope of the supply curve.c. shifting the supply curve to the left.d. changing the slope of the demand curve.参考答案:1. b2.b3.d4.a5.b6.d7.c8.a9.c 10.c第七章1. The difference between the amount a seller is paid for a good and the cost of producing that good is known asa. net social cost.b. producer surplus.c. consumer surplus.d. total utility.2. Markets will NOT allocate resources efficiently ifa. there are many buyers and sellers.b. there is perfect competition.c. there are externalities.d. the market is allowed to reach equilibrium.3. Micha can provide Albert’s Services a networked computer system at a cost of $500.Albert’s manager will pay her $700 for providing the system. Micha’s producer surplus isa. $700.b. $500.c. $200.d. $0.4. An increase in the price of a good will causea. an increase in producer surplus and a decrease in consumer surplus.b. a decrease in producer surplus and an increase in consumer surplus.c. both producer and consumer surplus to increase.d. both producer and consumer surplus to decrease.5. The study of how the allocation of resources affects economic well-being is calleda. consumer economics.b. macroeconomics.c. welfare economics.d. supply-side economics.6.If a consumer is willing and able to pay $15.00 for a particular good but the price of the good is $17.00, then thea. consumer would have consumer surplus of $2.00.b. consumer would increase his/her willingness and ability to pay by earning more.c. consumer would not purchase the good and would not have any consumer surplus.d. market must not be a perfectly competitive market.7. On a graph, consumer surplus would be the areaa. between the demand and supply curves.b. below the demand curve and above price.c. below the price and above the supply curve.d. below the demand curve to the right of equilibrium price.8. Total surplus in a market is represented by the total areaa. under the demand curve and above the price.b. above the supply curve and up to the equilibrium price.c. under price and up to the point of equilibrium.d. between the demand and supply curves up to the point of equilibrium.9. When economists say that markets are efficient, they are assuming that markets area. perfectly competitive.b. not for illegal products.c. regulated by the government.d. monopolistic.10. “Laissez-faire” is a French expression which literally meansa. to make do.b. to get involved.c. whatever works.d. allow them to do.参考答案:1. b2.c3.c4.a5.c6.c7.b8.d9.a 10.d第⼋章1. A tax placed on a product causes the price the buyer paysa. and the price the seller receives to be higher.b. and the price the seller receives to be lower.c. to be lower and the price the seller receives to be higher.d. to be higher and the price the seller receives to be lower.2. Suppose a tax is imposed on the buyers of a product. The burden of the tax will falla. entirely on the buyers.b. entirely on the sellers.c. entirely on the government.d. on both the buyers and the sellers.3. Total tax revenue received by government can be expressed asa. T/Q.b. T+Q.c. T×Q.d. T-Q.4. When the government places a tax on a producta. the cost of the tax to buyers and sellers will be less than the revenue raised from the tax by the government.b. the cost of the tax to buyers and sellers will equal the revenue raised from the tax by the government.c. the cost of the tax to buyers and sellers exceeds the revenue raised from the tax by the government.d. without additional information, such as the elasticity of demand for this product, it is impossible to compare tax cost with tax revenue.5. Deadweight loss is thea. reduction in total surplus that results from a tax.b. loss of profit to businesses when a tax is imposed.c. reduction in consumer surplus when a tax is placed on buyers.d. decline in government revenue when taxes are reduced in a market.6. A tax has a deadweight loss becausea. it induces the government to spend more.b. it induces buyers to consume less and sellers to produce less.c. it causes a disequilibrium in the market.d. the loss to buyers is greater than the loss to sellers.7. The amount of deadweight loss that will result from a tax is determined by thea. price elasticity of demand and supply.b. number of buyers of the product in the market.c. number of suppliers of the product in the market.d. percentage of the purchase price the tax amounts to.8. The size of the tax and the deadweight loss of a tax area. positively related.b. negatively related.c. independent of each other.d. equal to each other.9. The greater the elasticities of demand and supply thea. smaller the deadweight loss from a tax.b. less intrusive a tax will be on a market.c. greater the deadweight loss from a tax.d. more equitable the distribution of a tax between buyers and sellers.10. If the size of a tax increases, tax revenue willa. increase.b. decrease.c. remain the same.d. increase, then decrease.参考答案:1.d2.d3.c4.c5.a6.b7.a8.a9.c 10.d。
微观经济学习题(英文)
Homework 2 (36 problems)Multiple ChoiceIdentify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.____ 1. In a market economy,a. supply determines demand and demand, in turn, determines prices.b. demand determines supply and supply, in turn, determines prices.c. the allocation of scarce resources determines prices and prices, in turn, determine supplyand demand.d. supply and demand determine prices and prices, in turn, allocate the economy’s scarceresources.____ 2. Buyers and sellers who have no influence on market price are referred to asa. market pawns.b. monopolists.c. price takers.d. price makers.____ 3. Which of these statements best represents the law of demand?a. When buyers’ tastes for a good increase, they purchase more of the good.b. When income levels increase, buyers purchase more of most goods.c. When the price of a good decreases, buyers purchase more of the good.d. When buyers’ demands for a good incr ease, the price of the good increases.____ 4. An increase in the price of a good willa. increase demand.b. decrease demand.c. increase quantity demanded.d. decrease quantity demanded.____ 5. Which of the following would not shift the demand curve for mp3 players?a. a decrease in the price of mp3 playersb. a fad that makes mp3 players more popular among 12-25 year oldsc. an increase in the price of CDs, a complement for mp3 playersd. a decrease in the price of satellite radio, a substitute for mp3 players____ 6. If the number of buyers in a market decreases, thena. demand will increase.b. demand will decrease.c. supply will increase.d. supply will decrease.____ 7. Opponents of cigarette taxes often argue that tobacco and marijuana are substitutes so that high cigarette pricesa. encourage marijuana use, and the evidence supports this argument.b. encourage marijuana use, but the evidence does not support this argument.c. discourage marijuana use, and the evidence supports this argument.d. discourage marijuana use, but the evidence does not support this argument.Table 4-3____ 8. Refer to Table 4-3.If these are the only four sellers in the market, then the market quantity supplied ata price of $4 isa. 4 units.b. 7.5 units.c. 10 units.d. 30 units.____ 9. Suppose you make jewelry. If the price of gold falls, then we would expect you toa. be willing and able to produce less jewelry than before at each possible price.b. be willing and able to produce more jewelry than before at each possible price.c. face a greater demand for your jewelry.d. face a weaker demand for your jewelry.____ 10. Recent forest fires in the western states are expected to cause the price of lumber to rise in the next 6 months. As a result, we can expect the supply of lumber toa. fall in 6 months, but not now.b. increase in 6 months when the price goes up.c. fall now.d. increase now to meet as much demand as possible.____ 11. A decrease in the number of sellers in the market causesa. the supply curve to shift to the left.b. the supply curve to shift to the right.c. a movement up and to the right along a stationary supply curve.d. a movement downward and to the left along a stationary supply curve.____ 12. A shortage exists in a market ifa. there is an excess supply of the good.b. the situation is such that the law of supply and demand would predict a decrease in theprice of the good from its current level.c. the current price is below its equilibrium price.d. quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded.____ 13. If a shortage exists in a market, then we know that the actual price isa. above the equilibrium price and quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded.b. above the equilibrium price and quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied.c. below the equilibrium price and quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied.d. below the equilibrium price and quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded.Figure 4-12The diagram below pertains to the demand for turkey in the United States.____ 14. Refer to Figure 4-12.All else equal, a sale on chicken would cause a movea. from D A to D B.b. from D B to D A.c. from x to y.d. from y to x.Figure 4-13The diagram below pertains to the supply of paper in university markets.____ 15. Refer to Figure 4-13.All else equal, an increase in the use of laptop computers for note-taking would cause a movea. from x to y.b. from y to x.c. from S A to S B.d. from S B to S A.____ 16. Which of the following would increase in response to a decrease in the price of ironing boards?a. the quantity of irons demanded at each possible price of ironsb. the equilibrium quantity of ironsc. the equilibrium price of ironsd. All of the above are correct.____ 17. Which of the following events would unambiguously cause a decrease in the equilibrium price of cotton shirts?a. an increase in the price of wool shirts and a decrease in the price of raw cottonb. a decrease in the price of wool shirts and a decrease in the price of raw cottonc. an increase in the price of wool shirts and an increase in the price of raw cottond. a decrease in the price of wool shirts and an increase in the price of raw cotton____ 18. When consumers face rising gasoline prices, they typicallya. reduce their quantity demanded more in the long run than in the short run.b. reduce their quantity demanded more in the short run than in the long run.c. do not reduce their quantity demanded in the short run or the long run.d. increase their quantity demanded in the short run but reduce their quantity demanded inthe long run.____ 19. Which of the following statements about the price elasticity of demand is correct?a. The price elasticity of demand for a good measures the willingness of buyers of the goodto buy less of the good as its price increases.b. Price elasticity of demand reflects the many economic, psychological, and social forcesthat shape consumer tastes.c. Other things equal, if good x has close substitutes and good y does not have closesubstitutes, then the demand for good x will be more elastic than the demand for good y.d. All of the above are correct.____ 20. If the price of natural gas rises, when is the price elasticity of demand likely to be the highest?a. immediately after the price increaseb. one month after the price increasec. three months after the price increased. one year after the price increase____ 21. For a good that is a necessity, demanda. tends to be inelastic.b. tends to be elastic.c. has unit elasticity.d. cannot be represented by a demand curve in the usual way.Figure 5-1A AB BC C DDQuantityPrice____ 22. Refer to Figure 5-1. The demand curve representing the demand for a luxury good with several closesubstitutes is a. A. b. B. c. C. d. D.Table 5-2The following table shows a portion of the demand schedule for a particular good at various levels of income.____ 23. Refer to Table 5-2. Using the midpoint method, when income equals $7,500, what is the price elasticityof demand between $16 and $20? a. 0.56 b. 0.75 c. 1.33 d. 1.80____ 24. If demand is price inelastic, thena. buyers do not respond much to a change in price.b. buyers respond substantially to a change in price, but the response is very slow.c. buyers do not alter their quantities demanded much in response to advertising, fads, orgeneral changes in tastes. d. the demand curve is very flat.Figure 5-4____ 25. Refer to Figure 5-4. The section of the demand curve from B to C represents thea. elastic section of the demand curve.b. inelastic section of the demand curve.c. unit elastic section of the demand curve.d. perfectly elastic section of the demand curve.____ 26. For a horizontal demand curve,a. slope is undefined, and price elasticity of demand is equal to 0.b. slope is equal to 0, and price elasticity of demand is undefined.c. slope and price elasticity of demand both are undefined.d. slope and price elasticity of demand both are equal to 0.____ 27. Harry's Barber Shop increased its total monthly revenue from $1,500 to $1,800 when it raised the price ofa haircut from $5 to $9. The price elasticity of demand for Harry's Haircuts isa. 0.567.b. 0.700.c. 1.429.d. 2.200.____ 28. When demand is inelastic within a certain price range, then within that price range,a. an increase in price would increase total revenue because the decrease in quantitydemanded is proportionately less than the increase in price.b. an increase in price would decrease total revenue because the decrease in quantitydemanded is proportionately greater than the increase in price.c. a decrease in price would increase total revenue because the increase in quantitydemanded is proportionately smaller than the decrease in price.d. a decrease in price would not affect total revenue.____ 29. How does total revenue change as one moves downward and to the right along a linear demand curve?a. It always increases.b. It always decreases.c. It first increases, then decreases.d. It is unaffected by a movement along the demand curve.____ 30. Muriel's income elasticity of demand for football tickets is 1.50. All else equal, this means that if her income increases by 20 percent, she will buya. 150 percent more football tickets.b. 50 percent more football tickets.c. 30 percent more football tickets.d. 20 percent more football tickets.____ 31. Refer to Table 5-5. Using the midpoint method, the income elasticity of demand for good Y isa. 2.33, and good Y is a normal good.b. -2.33, and good Y is an inferior good.c. -0.43, and good Y is a normal good.d. -0.43, and good Y is an inferior good.____ 32. If, for two goods, the cross-price elasticity of demand is 1.25, thena. the two goods are luxuries.b. the two goods are substitutes.c. one of the goods is normal and the other good is inferior.d. the demand for one of the goods conforms to the law of demand, but the demand for theother good violates the law of demand.Short Answer33.a. Given the table below, graph the demand and supply curves for flashlights. Makecertain to label the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity.b. What is the equilibrium price and the equilibrium quantity?c. Suppose the price is currently $5. What problem would exist in the market? Whatwould you expect to happen to price? Show this on your graph.d. Suppose the price is currently $2. What problem would exist in the market? Whatwould you expect to happen to price? Show this on your graph.34. Fill in the table below, showing whether equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity go up, go down, staythe same, or change ambiguously.35. Consider the following pairs of goods. For which of the two goods would you expect the demand to bemore price elastic? Why?a. water or diamondsb. insulin or nasal decongestant sprayc. food in general or breakfast cereald. gasoline over the course of a week or gasoline over the course of a yeare. personal computers or IBM personal computers36. Use the graph shown to answer the following questions. Put the correct letter(s) in the blank.a. The elastic section of the graph is represented by section from _______.b. The inelastic section of the graph is represented by section from _______.c. The unit elastic section of the graph is represented by section _______.d. The portion of the graph in which a decrease in price would cause total revenue to fallwould be from _________.e. The portion of the graph in which a decrease in price would cause total revenue to risewould be from _________.f. The portion of the graph in which a decrease in price would not cause a change in totalrevenue would be _________.g. The section of the graph in which total revenue would be at a maximum would be_______.h. The section of the graph in which elasticity is greater than 1 is _______.i. The section of the graph in which elasticity is equal to 1 is ______.j. The section of the graph in which elasticity is less than 1 is _______.。
微观经济学英文版习题(附答案)2
ECON915 Financial Economics Seminar 21. As an investor, you consider investing in a recently liberalized emerging market economy. From past post liberalization performance data for this economy you know that investment projects tend to have a pay-off of 11.57% per annum. What assumption would you have to make to conclude that this figure is a good guide to future investment returns.One assumption for past sample data to give a guide to the future is that the remaining investment opportunities are of equal quality as the ones earlier exploited. If one assumes that there is a limited pool of such opportunities (not an entirely realistic assumption) it would appear that the more profitable ones get taken first. So, later investment projects may well earn a lower return.A second reason has to do with diminishing marginal returns to individual production factors and capital saturation in the production process. We will address this in more detail in the context of growth theory next semester. The basic lesson here is that in an applied context one needs to be aware about the factors that influence the probabilities underlying past decision making.2. How would a change in the market rate of interest affect the allocation of consumption over time?A rise in the rate of interest would lead to an increase in future consumption and a fall in present consumption. A fall in the rate of interest would likewise lead to a rise in present consumption relative to future consumption. In either case, the market rate of interest is equal to the consumer’s rate of time preference at the new equilibrium point.3. Assume you and a business partner attempt to agree on an investment project. You have a strong preference for saving while you know your business partner’s preference to be weighted in favour of present consumption. How, if at all, could you agree on the optimum amount to invest in your firm?Microeconomic theory tells us that you should invest in your firm until the internal rate of return to your investment project has fallen to the market rate of interest. Once this point is achieved, your ‘hedonistic’ business partner can borrow at the market rate of interest to fund his present consumption. You can likewise invest your remaining assets in a bank account. Both of you benefit from this arrangement. Even your business partner does, since the investment project earns a higher rate of return than the market rate of interest, enabling him to consume more over both periods, and re-allocate this higher income at a cost determined by the market interest rate.4. Consider an income prospect of £749 with a certainty equivalent income level of £1024. Would an economic agent with risk preferences corresponding to this scenario be risk averse or risk loving?He would be risk loving, since the amount of certain income creating the equivalent amount of utility (hence certainty equivalent) to a given prospect, is higher than the expected value of this income prospect.5. Assume that at the end of the course you join the other MSc Finance students for a drink in a local pub. By the end of the evening you have reached a state of intoxication that makes you feel generous so you volunteer to pay for the drinks of all MSc students who have not yet paid for their drink. Do you pay for your own drink?The operative concepts here are membership of the set of MSc students and ownership of the drinks to be paid for. By the statement above, you should strictly speaking not have paid for your own drink, since you only pay for the drinks of those MSc students who do not pay for their own drinks and you are one of the MSc students. If however you don’t pay for your own drink, then you belong to the subset of those MSc students who have not paid for their drinks so that you would have to pay for it if it were not for the fact that you only pay for the drinks of those who don’t pay for their own drink and this is your own drink after all ….As should be clear by now the above statement is –in good logic- paradoxical. In general terms, it is not possible in set logic to define a set of all sets that do not contain themselves since such a set would have to contain itself while it would be simultaneously required that it can’t do so.This is also known Russel’s paradox. If you go further into this you will find that it closely ties in with the impossibility of creating self contained logical systems. Many of the assumptions made in economic theory are introduced to simplify things. Even if they were not, some assumptions would have to be made as a basis for any theory (and this includes theoretical physics).。
微观经济学试题及答案英文版
微观经济学试题及答案英文版Microeconomics Exam Questions and Answers (English Version)Question 1:Define the law of demand and explain how it relates to the concept of elasticity.Answer 1:The law of demand states that, all else being equal, the quantity demanded of a good or service will decrease as its price increases, and vice versa. Elasticity, specifically price elasticity of demand, measures the responsiveness of the quantity demanded to a change in price. It is calculated as the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price. If the absolute value of the elasticity coefficient is greater than one, the demand is elastic; if it is less than one, the demand is inelastic; and if it equals one, the demand is unit elastic.Question 2:Explain the concept of marginal utility and how it relates to consumer behavior.Answer 2:Marginal utility is the additional satisfaction or utility derived from consuming one more unit of a good or service. It is the first derivative of the total utility function with respect to the quantity consumed. As consumers consume moreof a good, the marginal utility typically decreases, a phenomenon known as the law of diminishing marginal utility. This concept is fundamental to understanding consumer behavior and the decision-making process when allocating a limited budget among various goods and services.Question 3:What is the difference between a perfectly competitive market and a monopoly?Answer 3:A perfectly competitive market is characterized by a large number of buyers and sellers, homogeneous products, free entry and exit, and the absence of barriers to entry. Prices are determined by the market and individual firms are price takers. In contrast, a monopoly is a market structure where there is only one seller of a unique product with no close substitutes. The monopolist has market power and can set prices above marginal cost, leading to deadweight loss and inefficiency.Question 4:Explain the concept of opportunity cost and give an example.Answer 4:Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative that is forgone when making a choice. It represents the benefits an individual, investor, or business misses out on when choosing one alternative over another. For example, if a farmer has a choice between growing wheat or corn on a piece of land, the opportunity cost of choosing to grow wheat isthe profit that could have been earned from growing corn.Question 5:What are the factors that determine the shape of a firm's supply curve?Answer 5:The shape of a firm's supply curve is determined by the relationship between the cost of production and the quantity supplied. If the marginal cost of production is constant, the supply curve will be perfectly elastic (horizontal). If the marginal cost increases as production increases, the supply curve will be upward sloping. Factors such as technology, input costs, and the availability of resources can influence the shape of the supply curve.End of ExamPlease note that this is a sample exam and the questions and answers provided are for illustrative purposes only.。
微观经济学试题英文版
Managerial EconomicsPart 1:1. The price of good A goes up. As a result the demand for good B shifts to the left. From this we can infer that:a. good A is a normal good.b. good B is an inferior good.c. goods A and B are substitutes.d. goods A and B are complements.e. none of the above.Choose: d) the definition os complements2. Joe's budget line is 15F + 45C = 900. When Joe chooses his most preferred market basket, he buys 10 units of C. therefore, he also buys :a. 10 units of Fb. 30 units of Fc. 50 units of Fd. 60 units of Fe. None of the aboveChoose: b) We assume that Joe will spend all his income. If C = 10, then 15F =900 – 45(10) =450, so F = 450/15 =30.3. Kim only buys coffee and compact discs. Coffee costs $0.60 per cup, and CDs cost $12.00 each. She has $18 per week to spend on these two goods. If Kim is maximizing her utility, her marginal rate of substitution of coffee for CDs is:a. 0.05b. 20c. 18d. 1.50e. None of the aboveChoose: a) At Kim's most preferred market basket, her MRS equals the price ratio (Pcoffee/PCD), which equals 0.6/12 or 0.05.4. The bandwagon effect corresponds best to which of the following?a. snob effect.b. external economy.c. negative network externality.d. positive network externality.Choose: d)5. A Giffen gooda. is always the same as an inferior good.b. is the special subset of inferior goods in which the substitution effect dominates the income effect.c. is the special subset of inferior goods in which the income effect dominates the substitution effect.d. must have a downward sloping demand curve.Choose: c) the definition of Giffen good6. An Engel curve for a good has a positive slope if the good is :a. an inferior good.b. a Giffen good.c. a normal good. d. a, b, and c are true.e. None of the above is true.Choose: c) Inferior and Giffen goods have negatively sloped Engel curves.7. The price of beef and quantity of beef traded are P* and Q*, respectively. Given this information, consumer surplus is the area:a. 0BCQ*b. ABCc. ACP*d. CBP*e. 0ACQ*Choose: d)Consumer surplus is the area between the demand line and the price.8. In Figure 1, holding income constant, what change must have occurred to rotate the budget line from the old line(1) to the new line(2)?Figure 1a. The price of Coke fellb. The price of pizza fellc. The price of pizza rosed. The price of Coke went upe. b and cChoose: b) The horizontal intercept, I/PC, is unchanged, which implies that PC could not have changed (holding income constant). Since the slope is PP/PC, the slope change means that the price of pizza must have fallen. This can also be seen intuitively from Figure 1, since the consumer can now buy more pizza than before if he spends all his income on pizza.9. Andy buys 10 pounds of onions per month when the price is $0.75 per pound. If the price falls to $0.50 per pound, he buys 30 pounds of onions. What is his arc elasticity of demand over this price range?a. - 1.33b.–2c.–2.5d. - 6e. None of the above is correct. Choose: c) Using the arc elasticity formula,5.22)1030(2)75.050.0()75.050.0()1030(-=÷+÷⨯⨯--=⨯∆∆=Q P P Q EP The next two questions refer to the following information: Opie and Gomer are theonly two consumers in the video cassette rental market in the Mayberry. Their demand curves per week are pictured in Figure 2.10. If rentals cost $2.50 each, the total quantity demanded each week in the market is :a. 3b. 6c. 15d. 10e. None of the above is correct.Choose: b) Add horizontally to get the market demand curve. At P = $2.50, QO = 3 and QG = 3 for a total of 6 units demanded.11. For a decrease in price from $2.50 to $1.50, market demand is :a. elastic.b. unit elastic. c. inelastic.d. perfectly inelastic.e. More information is needed. Choose: a) Demand is price elastic:EP = %ΔQ/%ΔP = [(15(a)12. As president and CEO of MegaWorld industries, you must decide on some very risky alternative investments:a. A.b. B.c. C.d. D.e. EChoose: b) Ea=2 Eb=6.8 Ec=0 Ed=6 Ee=613. An individual with a constant marginal utility of income will bea. risk averse.b. risk neutral.c. risk loving.d. insufficient information for a decision.Choose: b)An individual with a constant marginal utility of income is risk neutral.14. In the figure below, what is true about the two jobs?a.Job 1 has a lower standard deviation than Job 2.b.All outcomes in both jobs have the same probability of occurrence.c. A risk-averse person would prefer Job 2.d. A risk-neutral person would prefer Job 1.e.Job 1 has a higher expected income than Job 2.Choose: a) Job 1 has a lower standard deviation than Job 2. Expected income of Job 1 equals to Job 2.Part 2:The demand curves for steak, eggs, and hot dogs are given in the table below. The current price of steak is $5. The price of eggs is $2.50, and the price of hot dogsis $0.75. Fill in the remaining columns of the table using this information.Solution:Steak and eggs are complements. Steak and hotdogs and eggs and hotdogs are substitutes.Part 3:Draw indifference curves to represent the following descriptions of consumer preferences:a. I can’t taste the difference between apple and grape jelly, but I likethem both.b. I only like grape jelly and never eat apple jelly.c. Apple and grape jelly are better mixed, although I don’t care too much about the proportions.Answer:a) See Figure 7(a). Since the consumer can not tell the difference between the twoflavors, all he would care about is the total amount of jelly he has.b) See Figure 7(b). An increase in the amount of apple jelly does not affect the consumer since he never eats it.c) See Figure 7(c). Here, a mixed bundle is better than an extreme one, but the consumer is willing to trade off the different flavors.Figure 7Part 4:There are reasons other than fads, fashions, and consumer insecurity for bandwagon and snob effects. Various types of externalities in the consumption of certain goods also exist. Explain which these effects (bandwagon or snob) might be present in the following cases:a. A restaurant that is often crowdedb. A personal computer software productc. A rock concertAnswer:a) A price decrease will attract more customers, but the crowding(longer lines,poorer service) will discourage others. This would resemble a snob effect. b) The more people you expect to buy a software product, the more likely you canfind another experienced user to ask questions about it. Also, the more likely it is that a computer bookstore will carry publications about how to use the software. Thus, we would expect to see a bandwagon effect.Ounces of Grape Jelly Ounces of Apple Jelly (a) Ounces of Grape Jelly Ounces of Apple Jelly(b) (c) Ounces of Grape Jelly Ounces ofApple Jellyc) Here, crowding might discourage some customers. But, since part of the enjoyment of a concert is seeing the band with other fans, we might observe a bandwagon effect.Part 5:Tom Wilson is the operations manager for Bi-Corp, a real estate investment firm. Tom must decide if Bi-Corp is to invest in a strip mall in a northeast metropolitan area. If the shopping center is highly successful, after tax profits will be $100,000 per year. Moderate success would yield an annual profit of $50,000, while the project will lose $10,000 per year if it is unsuccessful. Past experience suggests that there is a 40% chance that the project will be highly successful, a 40% chance of moderate success, and a 20% probability that the project will be unsuccessful. a. Calculate the expected value and standard deviation of profit. b. The project requires an $800,000 investment. If Bi-Corp has an 8% opportunity coston invested funds of similar riskiness, should the project be undertaken? Solution:a.Expected Value∑==n1i ^i ^i P πππi ^P i ^ πi ^P i ^100,000 .4 40,00050,000 .4 20,000 -10,000 .2 -2,000π = 58,000Standard deviationσππ=-=∑i 2i ^i 1nPπi ^ππi - ππi 2-ππi 2P -100,000 42,000, 764,000,000 705,600,00050,000 -8,000 64,000,000 25,600,000 -10,000 -68,000 4,624,000,000 924,800,000 σ2 = 1,656,000,000σ = 40,693.98 b.Bio-Corp's opportunity cost is 8% of 800,000 or 0.08 x 800,000 = 64,000.The expected value of the project is less than the opportunity cost. Bi-Corp should not undertake the project.。
微观经济学英文版题库练习完整版
微观经济学英文版题库练习完整版Chapter 01Thinking Like an Economist Multiple Choice Questions1. Economics is best defined as the study of:A. prices and quantities.B. inflation and interest rates.C. how people make choices under the conditions of scarcity and the results of those choices.D. wages and incomes.2. Economic questions always deal with:A. financial matters.B. political matters.C. insufficient resources.D. choice in the face of limited resources.3. The range of topics or issues that fit within the definition of economics is:A. limited to market activities, e.g., buying soap.B. limited to individuals and firms.C. extremely wide, requiring only the ideas of choice and scarcity.D. very limited.4. The central concern of economics is:A. poverty.B. scarcity.C. wealth accumulation.D. overconsumption.5. The scarcity principle indicates that:A. no matter how much one has, it is never enough.B. compared to 100 years ago, individuals have less timetoday.C. with limited resources, having more of "this" means having less of "that."D. because tradeoffs must be made, resources are therefore scarce.6. The logical implication of the scarcity principle is that:A. one will never be satisfied with what one has.B. as wealth increases, making choices becomes less necessary.C. as wealth decreases, making choices becomes less necessary.D. choices must be made.7. If all the world's resources were to magically increase a hundredfold, then:A. the scarcity principle would still govern behavior.B. economics would no longer be relevant.C. the scarcity principle would disappear.D. tradeoffs would become unnecessary.8. The principle of scarcity applies to:A. the poor exclusively.B. all consumers.C. all firms.D. everyone—consumers, firms, governments, and nations.9. At the very least, Joe Average and Bill Gates are both identically limited by:A. their wealth.B. the 24 hours that comprise a day.C. their knowledge.D. their influence.10. Forest is a mountain man living in complete isolation inMontana. He is completely self-sufficient through hunting, fishing, and farming. He has not been in the city to buy anything in five years. One can infer:A. the scarcity principle does not apply to Forest.B. Forest is not required to make choices.C. the scarcity principle still applies because more hunting means less fishing and farming.D. Forest is very satisfied.11. The scarcity principle applies to:A. all decisions.B. only market decisions, e.g., buying a car.C. only non-market decisions, e.g., watching a sunset.D. only the poor.12. Chris has a one-hour break between classes every Wednesday. Chris can either stay at the library and study or go to the gym and work out. The decision Chris must make is:A. not an economic problem because neither one costs money.B. not an economic problem because it's an hour that is wasted no matter what Chris does.C. an economic problem because the tuition Chris pays covers both the gym and the library.D. an economic problem because Chris has only one hour during which he can study or work out.13. Josh wants to go to the football game this weekend, but he has a paper due on Monday. It will take him the whole weekend to write the paper. Josh decided to stay home and work on the paper. According to the scarcity principle, the reason Josh didn't go to the game is that:A. Josh prefers schoolwork to football games.B. writing the paper is easier than going to the game.C. Josh doesn't have enough time for writing the paper and going to the game.D. it's too expensive to go to the game.14. Whether studying the size of the U.S. economy or the number of children a couple will choose to have, the unifying concept is that wants are:A. limited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.B. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus choices must be made.C. unlimited, resources are limited to some but not to others, and thus some people must make choices.D. unlimited, resources are limited, and thus government needs to do more.15. The cost-benefit principle indicates that an action should be taken:A. if the total benefits exceed the total costs.B. if the average benefits exceed the average costs.C. if the net benefit (benefit minus cost) is zero.D. if the extra benefit is greater than or equal to the extra costs.16. When a person decides to pursue an activity as long as the extra benefits are at least equal to the extra costs, that person is:A. violating the cost-benefit principle.B. following the scarcity principle.C. following the cost-benefit principle.D. pursuing the activity too long.17. Choosing to study for an exam until the extra benefit(improved score) equals the extra cost (mental fatigue) is:A. not rational.B. an application of the cost-benefit principle.C. an application of the scarcity principle.D. the relevant opportunity cost.18. The scarcity principle tells us that __________, and the cost-benefit principle tells us __________.A. choices must be made; how to make the choicesB. choices must be made; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choicesC. rare goods are expensive; that the costs should outweigh the benefits of the choicesD. rare goods are expensive; that the costs can never outweigh the benefits of the choices19. According to the cost-benefit principle:A. the lowest cost activity usually gives the lowest benefit.B. a person should always choose the activity with the lowest cost.C. a person should always choose the activity with the greatest benefit.D. the extra costs and benefits of an activity are more important considerations than the total costs and benefits.20. A rational person is one who:A. is reasonable.B. makes choices that are easily understood.C. possesses well-defined goals and seeks to achieve them.D. is highly cynical.21. The seventh glass of soda that Tim consumes will produce an extra benefit of 10 cents and has an extra cost of zero (Tim is eating at the cafeteria). Thecost-benefit principle predicts that Tim will:A. realize he has had too much soda to drink and go home.B. drink the seventh glass and continue until the marginal benefit of drinking another glass of soda is zero.C. volunteer to empty out the fountain.D. not drink the seventh glass.22. Janie must either mow the lawn or wash clothes, earning her a benefit of $30 or $45, respectively. She dislikes both equally and they both take the same amount of time. Janie will therefore choose to _________ because the economic surplus is ________.A. mow the lawn; greaterB. wash clothes; greaterC. mow the lawn; smallerD. wash clothes; smaller23. Dean decided to play golf rather than prepare for tomorrow's exam in economics. One can infer that:A. Dean has made an irrational choice.B. Dean is doing poorly in his economics class.C. the economic surplus from playing golf exceeded the surplus from studying.D. the cost of studying was less than the cost of golfing.Larry was accepted at three different graduate schools, and must choose one. Elite U costs $50,000 per year and did not offer Larry any financial aid. Larry values attending Elite U at $60,000 per year. State College costs $30,000 per year, and offered Larry an annual $10,000 scholarship. Larry values attending State College at $40,000 per year. NoName U costs $20,000 per year, and offered Larry a full $20,000 annual scholarship. Larry values attending NoName at $15,000 per year.。
- 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
- 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
- 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
Managerial EconomicsPart 1:1. The price of good A goes up. As a result the demand for good B shifts to the left. From this we can infer that:a. good A is a normal good.b. good B is an inferior good.c. goods A and B are substitutes.d. goods A and B are complements.e. none of the above.Choose: d) the definition os complements2. Joe's budget line is 15F + 45C = 900. When Joe chooses his most preferred market basket, he buys 10 units of C. therefore, he also buys :a. 10 units of Fb. 30 units of Fc. 50 units of Fd. 60 units of Fe. None of the aboveChoose: b) We assume that Joe will spend all his income. If C = 10, then 15F =900 –45(10) =450, so F = 450/15 =30.3. Kim only buys coffee and compact discs. Coffee costs $0.60 per cup, and CDs cost $12.00 each. She has $18 per week to spend on these two goods. If Kim is maximizing her utility, her marginal rate of substitution of coffee for CDs is:a. 0.05b. 20c. 18d. 1.50e. None of the aboveChoose: a) At Kim's most preferred market basket, her MRS equals the price ratio (Pcoffee/PCD), which equals 0.6/12 or 0.05.4. The bandwagon effect corresponds best to which of the following?a. snob effect.b. external economy.c. negative network externality.d. positive network externality.Choose: d)5. A Giffen gooda. is always the same as an inferior good.b. is the special subset of inferior goods in which the substitution effect dominates the income effect.c. is the special subset of inferior goods in which the income effect dominates the substitution effect.d. must have a downward sloping demand curve.Choose: c) the definition of Giffen good6. An Engel curve for a good has a positive slope if the good is :a. an inferior good.b. a Giffen good.c. a normal good. d. a, b, and c are true.e. None of the above is true.Choose: c) Inferior and Giffen goods have negatively sloped Engel curves.7. The price of beef and quantity of beef traded are P* and Q*, respectively. Given this information, consumer surplus is the area:a. 0BCQ*b. ABCc. ACP*d. CBP*e. 0ACQ*Choose: d)Consumer surplus is the area between the demand line and the price.8. In Figure 1, holding income constant, what change must have occurred to rotate the budget line from the old line(1) to the new line(2)?Figure 1a. The price of Coke fellb. The price of pizza fellc. The price of pizza rosed. The price of Coke went upe. b and cChoose: b) The horizontal intercept, I/PC, is unchanged, which implies that PC could not have changed (holding income constant). Since the slope is PP/PC, the slope change means that the price of pizza must have fallen. This can also be seen intuitively from Figure 1, since the consumer can now buy more pizza than before if he spends all his income on pizza.9. Andy buys 10 pounds of onions per month when the price is $0.75 per pound. If the price falls to $0.50 per pound, he buys 30 pounds of onions. What is his arc elasticity of demand over this price range?a. - 1.33b.–2c.–2.5d. - 6e. None of the above is correct. Choose: c) Using the arc elasticity formula,5.22)1030(2)75.050.0()75.050.0()1030(-=÷+÷⨯⨯--=⨯∆∆=Q P P Q EP The next two questions refer to the following information: Opie and Gomer are the only two consumers in the video cassette rental market in the Mayberry. Their demand curves per week are pictured in Figure 2.10. If rentals cost $2.50 each, the total quantity demanded each week in the market is : a. 3 b. 6 c. 15 d. 10 e. None of the above is correct.Choose: b) Add horizontally to get the market demand curve. At P = $2.50, QO = 3 and QG = 3 for a total of 6 units demanded.11. For a decrease in price from $2.50 to $1.50, market demand is :a. elastic.b. unit elastic. c. inelastic.d. perfectly inelastic.e. More information is needed. Choose: a) Demand is price elastic:EP = %ΔQ/%ΔP = [(15-6)/6]/[(2.50-1.50)/2.50] = -3.75(a)Figure 212. As president and CEO of MegaWorld industries, you must decide on some very risky alternative investments:The highest expected return belongs to investmenta. A.b. B.c. C.d. D.e. EChoose: b) Ea=2 Eb=6.8 Ec=0 Ed=6 Ee=613. An individual with a constant marginal utility of income will bea. risk averse.b. r isk neutral.c. risk loving.d. insufficient information for a decision.Choose: b)An individual with a constant marginal utility of income is risk neutral.14. In the figure below, what is true about the two jobs?a.Job 1 has a lower standard deviation than Job 2.b.All outcomes in both jobs have the same probability of occurrence.c. A risk-averse person would prefer Job 2.d. A risk-neutral person would prefer Job 1.e.Job 1 has a higher expected income than Job 2.Choose: a) Job 1 has a lower standard deviation than Job 2. Expected income of Job 1 equals to Job 2.Part 2:The demand curves for steak, eggs, and hot dogs are given in the table below. The current price of steak is $5. The price of eggs is $2.50, and the price of hot dogs is $0.75. Fill in the remaining columns of the table using this information. Indicate which goods are substitutes and which goods are complements.Solution:Steak and eggs are complements. Steak and hotdogs and eggs and hotdogs are substitutes.Part 3:Draw indifference curves to represent the following descriptions of consumer preferences:a. I can’t taste the difference between apple and grape jelly, but I likethem both.b. I only like grape jelly and never eat apple jelly.c. Apple and grape jelly are better mixed, although I don’t care too much about the proportions.Answer:a) See Figure 7(a). Since the consumer can not tell the difference between the two flavors, all he would care about is the total amount of jelly he has.b) See Figure 7(b). An increase in the amount of apple jelly does not affect the consumer since he never eats it.c) See Figure 7(c). Here, a mixed bundle is better than an extreme one, but the consumer is willing to trade off the different flavors..Figure 7Ounces of Grape JellyOunces of Apple Jelly (a)Ounces of Grape JellyOunces of Apple Jelly(b)(c)Ounces of Grape JellyOunces ofApple JellyPart 4:There are reasons other than fads, fashions, and consumer insecurity for bandwagon and snob effects. Various types of externalities in the consumption of certain goods also exist. Explain which these effects (bandwagon or snob) might be present in the following cases:a. A restaurant that is often crowdedb. A personal computer software productc. A rock concertAnswer:a) A price decrease will attract more customers, but the crowding(longer lines, poorerservice) will discourage others. This would resemble a snob effect.b)The more people you expect to buy a software product, the more likely you can findanother experienced user to ask questions about it. Also, the more likely it is that a computer bookstore will carry publications about how to use the software. Thus, we would expect to see a bandwagon effect.c) Here, crowding might discourage some customers. But, since part of the enjoyment of a concert is seeing the band with other fans, we might observe a bandwagon effect.Part 5:Tom Wilson is the operations manager for Bi-Corp, a real estate investment firm. Tom mustdecide if Bi-Corp is to invest in a strip mall in a northeast metropolitan area. If the shopping center is highly successful, after tax profits will be $100,000 per year. Moderate success would yield an annual profit of $50,000, while the project will lose $10,000 per year if it is unsuccessful. Past experience suggests that there is a 40% chance that the project will be highly successful, a 40% chance of moderate success, and a 20% probability that the project will be unsuccessful.a. Calculate the expected value and standard deviation of profit.b. The project requires an $800,000 investment. If Bi-Corp has an 8% opportunity cost oninvested funds of similar riskiness, should the project be undertaken?Solution: a.Expected Value∑==n1i ^i ^i P πππi ^ P i ^ πi ^P i ^100,000 .4 40,000 50,000 .4 20,000 -10,000.2-2,000π = 58,000Standard deviationσππ=-=∑i2i ^i 1nPπi ^ ππi -ππi 2-ππi 2P -100,000 42,000, 764,000,000 705,600,000 50,000-8,000 64,000,000 25,600,000-10,000 -68,000 4,624,000,000 924,800,000σ2= 1,656,000,000σ= 40,693.98b.Bio-Corp's opportunity cost is 8% of 800,000 or0.08 x 800,000 = 64,000.The expected value of the project is less than the opportunity cost. Bi-Corp should not undertake the project.。