ENGR.ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780190931919
Author: NEWNAN
Publisher: Oxford University Press
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Tomas is the general manager for a local automated car wash. The market he operates is
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- If Daniel sells 250 hamburgers at a price of $3.00, and his average cost of producing 250 hamburgers is $2.50, what is his profit? Profit = $ (enter your response in dollars and cents).arrow_forwardThe following graph plots the marginal cost (MC) curve, average total cost (ATC) curve, and average variable cost (AVC) curve for a firm operating in the competitive market for jumpsuits. COSTS (Dollars) 100 90 80 70 60 40 30 20 10 0 0 0 5 ▬▬ MC ATC AVC 10 15 20 25 30 35 QUANTITY (Thousands of jumpsuits) 40 ☐ 45 50arrow_forwardThe term “price taker” can apply to buyers as well as to sellers. A price-taking buyer is a buyer who cannot influence price by changing the amount she buys. What goods do you buy for which you are a price taker? What goods do you buy for which you are not a price taker?arrow_forward
- Use the table below to answer the following questions: Quantity Demand (Price) Marginal Revenue Marginal Cost Average Cost 1 $1200 1200 500 500 2 1100 1000 275 388 3 1000 800 225 333 4 900 600 250 313 5 800 400 400 330 6 700 200 500 358 7 600 0 700 407 What is this firm’s profit-maximizing price? What is its profit-maximizing output? What is the firm’s average profit? What is the firm’s total profit? If at least one consumer is willing to pay $1200 for this product, why won’t the monopolist charge $1200?arrow_forwardA young Thomas Edison makes 20 light bulbs a week in his dorm room. The parts for each light bulb cost $2.25. He sells each light bulb for $5.25. General Electric offers Thomas an executive job that pays $55.00 a week. Thomas’s weekly economic profit from making light bulbs is equal to: Instructions: Enter your answer as a whole number. If you are entering a negative number include a minus sign. $arrow_forwardHow do you find Profit maximization using total cost and total revenue curves in a price takers market?arrow_forward
- The curves show the marginal cost (MC), average variable cost (AVC), marginal revenue (MR), and average total cost (ATC) curves for a firm that sells mid-range cars in a competitive market. Use the area tool to draw the area representing the firm's profit or loss, if the firm produces 6,000 cars. Your answer should be a rectangle drawn with four corners.arrow_forwardSuppose the market for beans is perfectly competitive. The average total cost and marginal cost of growing beans in the long run for an individual farmer are illustrated in the graph to the right. According to the graph, the long run equilibrium price for beans is $ per box. (Enter a numeric response using a real number rounded to two decimal places.) C Price and cost (dollars per box) 10- 9- 00 N 1 0 10 MC 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Quantity of beans (boxes per week) ATC 90 100 Narrow_forwardSuppose that Roots' marginal cost of a jacket is a constant $75.00 and the total fixed cost at one of its stores is $2,000 a day. This store sells 25 jackets a day, which is its profit-maximizing number of jackets. Then the stores nearby start to advertise their jackets. The Roots store now spends $1,000 a day advertising its jackets, and its profit-maximizing number of jackets sold jumps to 75 a day. What is this store's average total cost of a jacket sold before the advertising begins and after the advertising begins. >>> Answer to 2 decimal places. Can you say what happens to the price of a Roots jacket, Roots' markup, and Roots' economic profit? Before the advertising begins, the average total cost of a jacket sold in this store is $ After the advertising begins, the average total cost of a jacket sold in this store is $ If the nearby firms' advertising decreases the demand for Roots' jackets and makes the demand more elastic, the price of a Roots' jacket If Roots' advertising…arrow_forward
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