2. You are an economic advisor to the Treasurer of the United States. Congress is considering increasing the sales tax on gasoline by $.03 per gallon. Last year motorists purchased 10 million gallons of gas per month. The demand curve is such that every $.01 increase in price decreases sales by 100,000 gallons per month. You also know that for every $.01 increase in price, producers are willing to provide 50,000 more gallons of gasoline to the market. The legislature has stated that the $.03 tax will increase government revenues by $300,000 per month and raise the price of gasoline by $.03 per gallon. Is this correct?
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3. The demand for company X's product is given by Qx = 12 - 3Px + 4Py. Suppose good X sells for $3.00 per unit and good Y sells for $1.50 per unit.
a. Calculate the cross-price elasticity of demand between goods X and Y at the given prices.
b. Are goods X and Y substitutes or complements?
c. What is the own price elasticity of demand at these prices?
d. How would your answers to parts a and c change if the price of X dropped to $2.50 per unit?
5. A consumer spends all of her income on only one good. What is the income elasticity of demand for this good? What is the own price elasticity of demand for this good?
6. Suppose that Bob's indifference curves are perfectly L-shaped with the right angle occurring when Bob has equal amounts of both goods. What does this imply about Bob's willingness to trade one good for the other? Give examples of goods where this type of behavior might be expected?
7. Suppose you are the manager of a firm that produces Ultrasweet, a sugar substitute. Show graphically the effect of a reduction in the price of Sweet and Healthy, a competitor's product, on a typical consumer's consumption of Ultrasweet.
8. In order to encourage energy conservation, many public utility companies charge consumers a higher rate on units of electricity consumed in excess of some threshold amount. In contrast, a common marketing ploy by other firms is to offer "quantity discounts" to consumers who purchase large quantities of a good. To illustrate how these pricing schemes alter the typical consumer's opportunity set, suppose income = $100, Px = $2 if the consumer buys less than 40 units of X, Px = $3 if the consumer buys more than 40 units of X, and Py = $5. Draw the budget constraint. How would the budget constraint change if the price decreased to $1 after 40 units of X were consumed?
9. Use indifference curve and constraint analysis to analyze the behavior of employees who are paid:
a. An hourly wage rate of $4 per hour.
b. A fixed hourly wage of $4 per hour, plus an overtime bonus of $4 for every hour worked in excess of eight hours.
c. A fixed salary of $40 per day, plus $4 for each hour worked.
d. Which of the above schemes would yield the largest number of hours worked? Explain.
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- Don't use chatgpt and make sure you include the graphs needed (a) Suppose in a competitive market, the market demand curve for salt is infinitelyinelastic. What is the impact of a per-unit tax (i.e. a specific tax) on the priceof salt that consumers pay?(b) Suppose the demand curve for butter is Q = 50 − 3P and the supply curve isQ = 2P. Suppose the government announces a per-unit tax of 1 on the priceof butter. Tax on butter can be seen as a ’fat tax’. What is the overall effectof a fat tax on the consumers? (c) If you were a policymaker and wanted to promote a fat tax in the UK, whatwould you cover in your policy campaign?arrow_forward3. Suppose that the free market equilibrium price of bourbon is $5.00 a bottle, and that the government sets a price floor of $6.00 a bottle on bourbon. The most likely result of this action is that: a. b. C. d. there will now be an excess supply of bourbon the market price of bourbon will remain at $5.00 a bottle. the demand curve for bourbon will shift outward. there will now be an excess demand for bourbon.arrow_forwardGive typing answer with explanation and conclusion In an effort to curb planetary obesity, authorities levy a tax of $20 per unit of lunar candy. How much of this tax is borne by the sellers? That is, by how much does the seller’s price change? demand - q = 600 − 2p supply - q = 2p − 400 Equilibrium price - 250 Equilibrium Quantity- 100 Use the equation Ps= Pd+ Tax to solve ANSWER IS 10arrow_forward
- 4. U.S. agricultural farmers are excited since the government announced an increase in subsidies even though the substitutes for agricultural goods that are imported have increased in demand; therefore, please illustrate by constructing a supply and demand graph, the direction in which the curves will shift and state the new equilibrium price and quantity; for example, state whether price and quantity increased, decreased, or are indeterminate. Please explain your rationale based on the determinants of demand and supply.arrow_forwardPrice (dollars per gallon) S2 $5.50 3.50 2.50 D Quantity (millions of gallons per month) 30 40 45 Assume the graph above illustrates a new tax put into the market for soft drinks. S2 is the supply curve with the $2 tax in place. What price would consumers pay if the tax was placed on consumers instead of producers? 1) $2.00 O 2) $3.50 3) $2.50 4) $1.50arrow_forwardI’m not sure how to go about solving this?arrow_forward
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