Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

TEST BANK FOR CHAPTER 10 : GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM AND WELFARE

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
7
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
23-03-2022
Written in
2021/2022

MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. Consider a two-good production economy in which both goods are produced with fixed proportions production functions. Then, some efficient allocations will exhibit unemployment of some factor providing a. the firms use the inputs in different proportions. b. the firms exhibit diminishing returns to scale. c. the firms exhibit increasing returns to scale. d. production can never be efficient if there are unemployed inputs. ANS: a 2. Suppose two goods (X and Y ) are being produced efficiently and that the production of X is always more labor intensive than the production of Y. Production depends only on two factors (capital and labor); these may be smoothly substituted for each other. The total quantities of these inputs are fixed. An increase in the production of X and a decrease in the production of Y will a. increase the capital-labor ratio in each firm. b. decrease the capital-labor ratio in each firm. c. leave the capital-labor ratio for each firm unchanged. d. increase the capital-labor ratio in Y production and decrease the capital -labor ratio in X production. ANS: a 3. An efficient allocation of productive inputs requires that a. each output has the same rate of technical substitution among inputs used. b. each output has the same marginal rate of substitution for consumers. c. each pair of outputs has the same rate of product transformation. d. each individual has the same marginal rate of substitution between outputs. ANS: a 4. The slope of the production possibility frontier shows a. the marginal rate of substitution between the two goods. b. the relative marginal costs of the two goods. c. the efficient combination of outputs possible using fixed amounts of input. d. the relative marginal productivities of the two goods. ANS: b 5. The rate of product transformation refers to a. how a consumer can trade one good for another while still maximizing his or her utility. b. how a firm can substitute one input for another and still maintain the same production level. c. how production of one good can be substituted for another while still using a fixed supply of inputs efficiently. d. how quickly a firm can produce a final good while starting with only natural resources. ANS: c 1 This study source was downloaded by from CourseH on 03-23-2022 09:35:25 GMT -05:00 TEST BANK FOR CHAPTER 10 : GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM AND WELFARE Chapter 10: General Equilibrium and Welfare 6. In an economy consisting of only two goods, corn and cloth, the amount of extra cloth that can be produced efficiently if corn output is reduced by one unit is equal to a. the rate of technical substitution for corn divided by the rate of technical substitution for cloth. b. the rate of technical substitution for cloth divided by the rate of technical substitution for corn. c. the marginal cost of producing cloth divided by the marginal cost of producing corn. d. the marginal cost of producing corn divided by the marginal cost of producing cloth. ANS: d 7. Each of the following factors might interfere with the efficiency of perfect competition except: a. increasing returns to scale. b. imperfect price information. c. externalities. d. diminishing returns to scale. ANS: d 8. The reason externalities distort the allocation of resources is that a. too few goods are usually produced. b. firms often go out of business because of the externality. c. a firm’s private costs do not reflect the social cost of production. d. regulating externalities uses scarce resources. ANS: c 9. Under a perfectly competitive price system a. an equitable allocation of the available resources will always result. b. there is no opportunity for individuals to trade amongst themselves. c. there is no reason to expect that voluntary trading will result in an equitable allocation of the available resources. d. None of the above will result. ANS: c 10. Consider three ways of allocating two goods in a two-person exchange economy. I. Both individuals take prices as given and equilibrium prices are established by an impartial auctioneer. II. One individual can act as a perfect price discriminator and force the other individual to pay a different price for each unit of a good that is traded. III. One individual is a monopolist and can charge the other individual a single,

Show more Read less
Institution
Course

Content preview

TEST BANK FOR CHAPTER 10 : GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM AND
TEST BANK FOR CHAPTER 10: General Equilibrium and Welfare
WELFARE
MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. Consider a two-good production economy in which both goods are produced with fixed
proportions production functions. Then, some efficient allocations will exhibit unemployment
of some factor providing
a. the firms use the inputs in different proportions.
b. the firms exhibit diminishing returns to scale.
c. the firms exhibit increasing returns to scale.
d. production can never be efficient if there are unemployed inputs.
ANS: a

2. Suppose two goods (X and Y ) are being produced efficiently and that the production of X is
always more labor intensive than the production of Y. Production depends only on two factors
(capital and labor); these may be smoothly substituted for each other. The total quantities of
these inputs are fixed. An increase in the production of X and a decrease in the production of
Y will
a. increase the capital-labor ratio in each firm.
b. decrease the capital-labor ratio in each firm.
c. leave the capital-labor ratio for each firm unchanged.
d. increase the capital-labor ratio in Y production and decrease the capital -labor ratio in X
production.
ANS: a

3. An efficient allocation of productive inputs requires that
a. each output has the same rate of technical substitution among inputs used.
b. each output has the same marginal rate of substitution for consumers.
c. each pair of outputs has the same rate of product transformation.
d. each individual has the same marginal rate of substitution between outputs.
ANS: a

4. The slope of the production possibility frontier shows
a. the marginal rate of substitution between the two goods.
b. the relative marginal costs of the two goods.
c. the efficient combination of outputs possible using fixed amounts of input.
d. the relative marginal productivities of the two goods.
ANS: b

5. The rate of product transformation refers to
a. how a consumer can trade one good for another while still maximizing his or her utility.
b. how a firm can substitute one input for another and still maintain the same production
level.
c. how production of one good can be substituted for another while still using a fixed supply
of inputs efficiently.
d. how quickly a firm can produce a final good while starting with only natural resources.
ANS: c




This study source was downloaded by 100000841341657 from CourseHero.com on 03-23-2022 09:35:25 GMT -05:00
1


https://www.coursehero.com/file/12388259/TEST-BANK-FOR-CHAPTER-10/

, 2 Chapter 10: General Equilibrium and Welfare


6. In an economy consisting of only two goods, corn and cloth, the amount of extra cloth that
can be produced efficiently if corn output is reduced by one unit is equal to
a. the rate of technical substitution for corn divided by the rate of technical substitution for
cloth.
b. the rate of technical substitution for cloth divided by the rate of technical substitution for
corn.
c. the marginal cost of producing cloth divided by the marginal cost of producing corn.
d. the marginal cost of producing corn divided by the marginal cost of producing cloth.
ANS: d

7. Each of the following factors might interfere with the efficiency of perfect competition
except:
a. increasing returns to scale.
b. imperfect price information.
c. externalities.
d. diminishing returns to scale.
ANS: d

8. The reason externalities distort the allocation of resources is that
a. too few goods are usually produced.
b. firms often go out of business because of the externality.
c. a firm’s private costs do not reflect the social cost of production.
d. regulating externalities uses scarce resources.
ANS: c

9. Under a perfectly competitive price system
a. an equitable allocation of the available resources will always result.
b. there is no opportunity for individuals to trade amongst themselves.
c. there is no reason to expect that voluntary trading will result in an equitable allocation of
the available resources.
d. None of the above will result.
ANS: c

10. Consider three ways of allocating two goods in a two-person exchange economy.
I. Both individuals take prices as given and equilibrium prices are established by
an impartial auctioneer.
II. One individual can act as a perfect price discriminator and force the other
individual to pay a different price for each unit of a good that is traded.
III. One individual is a monopolist and can charge the other individual a single,
utility-maximizing price.
Which of these situations is efficient?
a. None of them.
b. Only I.
c. I and II, but not III.
d. I and III, but not II.
ANS: c




This study source was downloaded by 100000841341657 from CourseHero.com on 03-23-2022 09:35:25 GMT -05:00


https://www.coursehero.com/file/12388259/TEST-BANK-FOR-CHAPTER-10/

Written for

Course

Document information

Uploaded on
March 23, 2022
Number of pages
7
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

$7.99
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
bmm7203 Harvard University
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
106
Member since
4 year
Number of followers
81
Documents
785
Last sold
1 month ago

3.1

25 reviews

5
9
4
3
3
3
2
1
1
9

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions