to see the questions. - FIU Faculty Websites
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to see the questions. - FIU Faculty Websites
Quiz #6 -- April 15, 2015 -- 2pm! Use the following to answer question 1. Figure 9.7 1. (Figure 9.7) The levels of consumer surplus under monopoly and perfect competition are ______ and ______, respectively. A) $600; $2,000 B) $200; $400 C) $800; $3,200 D) $400; $1,600 Page 1 Use the following to answer question 2. Figure 9.10 2. (Figure 9.10) If the government regulates the price of this natural monopolist to achieve a perfectly competitive output level, consumer surplus will change from ______ to ______. A) $3,000; $2,500 B) $15,000; $75,350 C) $5,000; $11,000 D) $17,000; $54,600 3. Which of the following requirements is necessary to practice price discrimination? I. II. III. IV. A) B) C) D) The firm must have market power. The firm can prevent arbitrage of its product. The firm faces a perfectly elastic demand curve. The firm operates in a perfectly competitive industry. II, III, and IV I, II, and III I and II III and IV Page 2 4. Sparkling Water Co. has determined that the price elasticity of demand for a case of its purified water by Michigan residents is –3.0, while the price elasticity of demand by Florida residents is –2.5. Assume that the marginal cost is constant at $8. What price should Sparking Water Co. charge Michigan and Florida customers? A) Customers in Michigan and Florida should be charged $16 a case. B) Michigan customers should be charged $12 a case and Florida customers charged $13.33 a case. C) Michigan customers should be charged $10 a case and Florida customers charged $14.00 a case. D) Customers in Michigan and Florida should be charged $13.33 a case. Use the following to answer question 5. Figure 10.5 5. (Figure 10.5) Suppose that a firm offers customers either (1) the ability to buy any quantity they desire for $24 per unit or (2) a price of $18 per unit if purchasing 15 or more units. Consumer surplus under the quantity discount is ______ than under the $24-per-unit pricing scheme, so the plan to charge these types of consumers a price of $24 per unit is ______ compatible. A) $64 more; incentive B) $32 less; not incentive C) $53 less; incentive D) $41 more; not incentive Page 3 Use the following to answer question 6. Table 10.4 Harry Stan Scenario A Golf Channel $10 $10 Mike Travis Scenario C Golf Channel $9 $7 History Channel $7 $7 History Channel $4 $8 Shirley Alec Scenario B Golf Channel $12 $8 History Channel $15 $10 Amy Pam Scenario D Golf Channel $6 $10 History Channel $8 $11 6. (Table 10.4) The table shows consumer valuations (maximum willingness to pay per month) for two cable television networks. In which of the scenarios would a cable television company experience an increase in producer surplus from using a bundling strategy as opposed to selling channel access separately? A) Scenario A B) Scenario B C) Scenario C D) Scenario D 7. A warehouse club has customers with identical demand curves: Q = 100 – 5P, where Q measures the annual number of merchandise units and P is the price per merchandise unit. The marginal cost of a merchandise unit is $10. If the warehouse club uses a two-part tariff strategy, it will earn producer surplus of ______ per customer. A) $1,060 B) $75 C) $450 D) $250 Page 4 8. A Nash equilibrium occurs when: A) each firm is doing the best it can, conditional on the actions taken by other firms. B) each firm is doing the worst it can, conditional on the actions taken by other firms. C) an oligopoly industry is characterized by excess demand, despite a market-clearing price. D) an oligopoly industry is characterized by excess supply, despite a market-clearing price. Use the following to answer question 9. Figure 11.1 9. (Figure 11.1) The graph depicts the market demand curve for a two-firm industry. If the two firms collude and evenly split the market output, how much output will each firm produce? A) 400 units B) 200 units C) 150 units D) 300 units 10. Which of the following is NOT a feature of Cournot competition? A) Firms sell identical products. B) Firms compete by choosing a quantity to produce. C) All goods sell at the same price. D) One firm sets its quantity to produce before the other firm. Page 5