ANSWERs) / Graded A+
1. In a perfectly competitive market, the demand curve faced by an individual firm is:
A) Perfectly inelastic
B) Downward sloping
C) Perfectly elastic
D) Upward sloping
ANSWER: C) Perfectly elastic. In perfect competition, firms are price takers. They can sell any quantity at
the market price, so their perceived demand curve is a horizontal line at that price, indicating infinite
elasticity.
2. The primary goal of a profit-maximizing firm is to:
A) Maximize total revenue
B) Maximize market share
C) Maximize the difference between total revenue and total cost
D) Minimize total cost
ANSWER: C) Maximize the difference between total revenue and total cost. This difference is economic
profit, which is the fundamental objective in standard managerial economics.
3. The additional revenue gained from selling one more unit of output is known as:
A) Marginal Cost
B) Average Revenue
C) Marginal Revenue
D) Total Revenue
ANSWER: C) Marginal Revenue. Marginal Revenue (MR) is defined as the change in total revenue from
selling one additional unit.
4. A firm should continue to produce in the short run as long as:
A) Price is greater than Average Total Cost (ATC)
,B) Price is greater than Average Fixed Cost (AFC)
C) Price is greater than Average Variable Cost (AVC)
D) Total Revenue is greater than Total Fixed Cost
ANSWER: C) Price is greater than Average Variable Cost (AVC). This ensures the firm can cover its variable
costs. Any revenue above AVC can contribute to covering some fixed costs, which are sunk in the short
run.
5. The shutdown point for a perfectly competitive firm occurs where:
A) Price equals Minimum Average Total Cost
B) Price equals Minimum Average Variable Cost
C) Total Revenue equals Total Fixed Cost
D) Marginal Revenue equals Zero
ANSWER: B) Price equals Minimum Average Variable Cost. At this point, the firm is indifferent between
producing and shutting down, as its loss is equal to its total fixed costs in either scenario.
6. A monopolist maximizes profit by producing the quantity where:
A) MR = MC
B) P = MC
C) P = ATC
D) MR = AVC
ANSWER: A) MR = MC. This is the fundamental profit-maximizing rule for all market structures. The
monopolist then charges the highest price consumers are willing to pay for that quantity, found on the
demand curve.
7. Which of the following is a characteristic of a monopoly?
A) Many sellers
B) Homogeneous product
C) Significant barriers to entry
D) Perfect information
ANSWER: C) Significant barriers to entry. Barriers to entry (e.g., patents, control of a key resource,
government franchise) are what allow a monopoly to exist by preventing competition.
,8. Price discrimination is the practice of:
A) Charging the same price to all consumers for the same product
B) Charging different prices to different consumers for the same product where the price differences are
not based on cost differences
C) Lowering prices to drive competitors out of business
D) Setting a price equal to marginal cost
ANSWER: B) Charging different prices to different consumers for the same product where the price
differences are not based on cost differences. The key is that the price variation reflects differences in
willingness to pay.
9. For a firm in monopolistic competition, the long-run equilibrium occurs where:
A) P = MC and P = ATC
B) P > MC and P = ATC
C) P = MR and P = ATC
D) P = MC and P > ATC
ANSWER: B) P > MC and P = ATC. Firms have some market power (P > MC), but free entry and exit drive
economic profit to zero (P = ATC).
10. In an oligopoly market structure, firms:
A) Are price takers
B) Face a perfectly elastic demand curve
C) Are interdependent in their decision-making
D) Sell a standardized product
ANSWER: C) Are interdependent in their decision-making. The actions of one firm significantly affect the
others, leading to strategic behavior, which is the defining feature of oligopoly.
11. The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) is a measure of:
A) Marginal cost
B) Market concentration
, C) Price elasticity of demand
D) Total industry revenue
ANSWER: B) Market concentration. It is calculated as the sum of the squares of the market shares of all
firms in the industry. A higher HHI indicates a more concentrated market.
12. In the Cournot model of oligopoly, firms compete by choosing:
A) Price
B) Advertising expenditure
C) Quantity
D) Product quality
ANSWER: C) Quantity. Firms simultaneously choose their output levels, assuming the output of the rival
is fixed.
13. A Nash equilibrium is a situation where:
A) All players cooperate to achieve the best joint outcome
B) No player can improve their payoff by unilaterally changing their strategy
C) All players have dominant strategies
D) The outcome is always socially efficient
ANSWER: B) No player can improve their payoff by unilaterally changing their strategy. Each player's
strategy is optimal given the strategies chosen by the others.
14. In the Bertrand model with homogeneous products, the equilibrium outcome is:
A) The same as a monopoly outcome
B) The same as the Cournot outcome
C) Price equal to marginal cost
D) Collusive pricing
ANSWER: C) Price equal to marginal cost. Firms undercut each other's prices until price is driven down to
marginal cost, resulting in a perfectly competitive outcome.
15. A strategy that is best for a player regardless of what strategies other players choose is called a: