Microeconomics (2nd Edition) (Pearson Series in Economics)
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134492049
Author: Daron Acemoglu, David Laibson, John List
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 17, Problem 1P
To determine
The highest amount a buyer is willing to offer to purchase a house.
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6) You have been assigned to create a new TV game show, and you have an interesting idea that you call, “I WANT TO BE A MILLIONAIRE.” The basics are: 1) two contestants; 2) the show begins with each contestant being given $1 million (!), and then 3) they begin playing a game that can increase or decrease that $1 million. You worry that the initial outlay of $2 million will stun your producers, so you decide to prepare them with a simpler version of your game that you call: “I WANT $3.” There are four steps in this simpler game:
I. There are two contestants/opponents (who do not know each other and cannot communicate with each other during the game).
II. Each player is given $3 at the start of the game.
III. Independently and simultaneously, each player must choose whether they want to add $0, $1, $2 or $3 to their initial stake of $3. Doing so reduces their opponent’s award by $0, $2, $4, or $6, respectively.
IV. Each player knows that their payoff at the end of the game is based on…
6) You have been assigned to create a new TV game show, and you have an interesting idea that you call, “I WANT TO BE A MILLIONAIRE.” The basics are: 1) two contestants; 2) the show begins with each contestant being given $1 million (!), and then 3) they begin playing a game that can increase or decrease that $1 million. You worry that the initial outlay of $2 million will stun your producers, so you decide to prepare them with a simpler version of your game that you call: “I WANT $3.” There are four steps in this simpler game:
I. There are two contestants/opponents (who do not know each other and cannot communicate with each other during the game).
II. Each player is given $3 at the start of the game.
III. Independently and simultaneously, each player must choose whether they want to add $0, $1, $2 or $3 to their initial stake of $3. Doing so reduces their opponent’s award by $0, $2, $4, or $6, respectively.
IV. Each player knows that their payoff at the end of the game is based on…
Firm A is planning to rollout a new nationwide wireless telephone service next month. Its potential customers are either light users or regular users and these exist in equal proportion in the population. The firm must decide between offering a plan with 300 minutes, 600 minutes, or offering both plans. Each of these options costs the firm $10 to provide, and consumers’ willingness to pay is given below: (Image Attached)
Each potential customer calculates the net payoff (benefit minus price) that he would get from each of the plans and buys the plan that gives the highest net payoff, so long as the payoff is nonnegative. Assume that if both plans give an equal, non-negative payoff the customer buys the 600 minute plan.
a) What prices should the firm set if it wants to offer both plans, such that light users purchase the 300 minute plan and regular users purchase the 600 minute plan?
b) How much higher is a regular user’s payoff under the scenario in part (a) above than if the firm…
Chapter 17 Solutions
Microeconomics (2nd Edition) (Pearson Series in Economics)
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