Principles Of Microeconomics
7th Edition
ISBN: 9781260111088
Author: Robert H. Frank, Ben Bernanke, Kate Antonovics, Ori Heffetz
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 1, Problem 6P
To determine
Explain the decision of attending the play or not.
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Catherine wins a non-transferable, non-refudnable ticket to attend Saturday's baseball game. Taylor plans to attend the same game, but she knows from experience she can purchase a $40 ticket the day of the game. On the day of the game, it is cold with off-and-on rain showers, weather that both Catherine and Taylor equally dislike, making the prospect of attending the game less attractive than before. If both Catherine and Taylor have the same tastes and rational:
a. Is one of them more likely to attend the baseball game than the other?
b. Instead of winning a ticket, assume that last week Catherine paid $40 for the non-trasnferable, non-refundable ticket to Saturday's game. Would this change whether or not one of them is more likely to attend the baseball game?
Van has plans to go to an opera and already has a $100 nonrefundable, nonexchangeable, and nontransferable ticket. Now Amy, whom Van has wanted to date for a long time, asks him to a party. Van would prefer to go to the party with Amy and forgo the opera, but he doesn't want to waste the $100 he spent on the opera ticket.
From the perspective of an economist, if Van decides to go to the party with Amy, what has he just done?
1. Incorrectly allowed a sunk cost to influence his decision
2. Made a choice that was not optimal
3 Correctly ignored a sunk cost
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Suppose you observe a person's answer to two decision problems.
Problem 1: You are offered $40 today. What is the minimum amount x you demand one month from
today in order to be willing to give up the $40 now? Answer: x = 52.
Problem 2: Your are offered $40 today. What is the minimum amount x you demand one year from
today in order to be willing to give up the $40 now? Answer: $60.
1. Demonstrate that the rational model of time preferences is violated for this choice pattern.
2. Derive this individual's B and d for the hyperbolic time discounting model.
3. Suppose the utility you get from eating ice cream now is 10 utils. But you pay a cost of -4 utils per
hour for the next 4 hours, because it gives you indigestion and makes you feel lethargic. If your
hourly B and d for this problem are B = .6 and d = .9, ...
1. What is the total discounted utility of eating ice cream now?
2. What is your total discounted utility now of planning to eat ice cream after lunch tomorrow?
3. Do you eat ice…
Chapter 1 Solutions
Principles Of Microeconomics
Ch. 1.A - Prob. 1CCCh. 1.A - Prob. 2CCCh. 1.A - Prob. 3CCCh. 1.A - Prob. 4CCCh. 1.A - Prob. 5CCCh. 1.A - Prob. 6CCCh. 1 - Prob. 1RQCh. 1 - Prob. 2RQCh. 1 - Prob. 3RQCh. 1 - Prob. 4RQ
Ch. 1 - Prob. 5RQCh. 1 - Prob. 1PCh. 1 - Prob. 2PCh. 1 - Prob. 3PCh. 1 - Prob. 4PCh. 1 - Prob. 5PCh. 1 - Prob. 6PCh. 1 - Residents of your city are charged a fixed weekly...Ch. 1 - Prob. 8PCh. 1 - For each long-distance call anywhere in the...Ch. 1 - Prob. 10PCh. 1 - Prob. 1.1CCCh. 1 - Prob. 1.2CCCh. 1 - Prob. 1.3CCCh. 1 - Prob. 1.4CCCh. 1 - Prob. 1.5CC
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