ENGR.ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780190931919
Author: NEWNAN
Publisher: Oxford University Press
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Despondent over the Red Sox's terrible season, Prof. Gruber decides to quit his day job and start a bicycle manufacturing firm in Kendall Square. As he starts looking into the bicycle manufacturing industry, he realizes it has some interesting features. First, he realizes that it operates as a competitive industry. Second, he finds that there are two technologies used by firms in the industry. Technology 1 uses solar power, and has a cost function C1(q)=q+4Q2+32 for q>0. Technology 2 uses electricity from the grid and is more efficient, with a cost function C2(q)=q+2Q2+32 for q>0. Assume that we are in the long run, so firms using both technologies can shut and leave the market at 0 cost, so that C(0)=0 for both technologies.
Now, suppose that the government of Massachusetts offers solar subsidies to 10 bicycle manufacturers. These subsidies are for $80 and the manufacturers receive these subsidies as long as they construct a bicycle manufacturing plant using the newly-invented solar technology (i.e. technology 1). Determine the new MC, AC, and supply curve for the solar technology with the subsidy.
E5)MC1(q)=
a) 1+4q+32/q
b)1+8q
c)1+2q-48/q
d)1+4q
e)None of the above
E6)AC1(q)=?
a)1+4q-48/q
b)1+2q-32/q
c)1+4q+48/q
d)1+2q+32/q
e)None of the above
E7)Q1(p)=?
a)1-p/8
b)p-1/8
c)1-p/16
d)p-1/16
e)None of the above
E8)The long run aggregate supply curve in this market (i.e. the total amount supplied by all firms as a function of price) depends on whether the price is less than 17.
For p
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