Economics (7th Edition) (What's New in Economics)
Economics (7th Edition) (What's New in Economics)
7th Edition
ISBN: 9780134738321
Author: R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O'Brien
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 18, Problem 18.1.5PA
To determine

Will preference show voting paradox.

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New York has the highest cigarette taxes in the country. The price of an average pack of cigarettes in New York City is $10.60. The combined state and city taxes are $5.95 a pack. The average income of smokers is less than that of non-smokers Draw a graph to show the effects of the $5.95 tax on the buyer's price, the seller's price, the quantity of cigarettes bought, and the tax revenue. Does the buyer or seller pay more of the tax? Why? The graph shows the market for cigarettes with no tax. Draw a point to show the market equilibrium quantity and price. Label it 1. Draw a line that shows how a $6 per pack tax changes the supply of cigarettes. Label it S+ tax. Draw a point at the new equilibrium quantity to show the price paid by buyers. Label it 2. Draw a point at the new equilibrium quantity to show the price received by the seller. Label it 3. Draw a shape that represents the tax revenue received by the government. The pays more of the tax because OA. buyer; sellers can always pass…
explain four reason why is tax important for a country
FRONT PAGE State Lotteries: A Tax on the Uneducated and the Poor Americans now spend over $85 billion a year on lottery tickets. That's more than we spend on sporting events, books, video games, movies, and music combined. That spending works out to about $650 a household. Poor people are proportionally the biggest buyers of lottery tickets. Households with less than $25,000 of income spend $1,100 a year on lottery tickets. By contrast, households with more than $50,000 of income buy only $300 of lottery tickets each year. Education also affects lottery spending: 2.7 percent of high school dropouts are compulsive lottery players, while only 1.1 percent of college grads play compulsively. Because lottery games are a sucker's game to start with-payouts average less than 60 percent of sales-lotteries are effectively a regressive tax on the uneducated and the poor. Source: Research on lottery sales. According to Front Page Economics, what percentage of income is spent on lottery tickets by…
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