Eco Questions
Eco Questions
Eco Questions
A A firm will carry on producing in the short run provided that price at least
equals average variable cost
B A firm will carry on producing in the short run provided that price at least
equals average fixed cost
C A firm will carry on producing in the short run provided that total revenue
at least equals total variable cost
D A firm will stop producing in the long run if total revenue is less than total
cost
Ans- B A firm will carry on producing in the short run provided total revenue
at least equals total variable cost, and is therefore making a contribution
towards fixed costs (so C is true).
If total revenue must at least equal total variable cost, price (average
revenue) must at least equal average variable cost (so A is true).
In the long run, if total revenue is less than total cost, the firm is not making
a normal profit and so will stop producing.
6. A demand curve is drawn on all except which of the following assumptions?
A Incomes do not change. B Prices of substitutes are fixed. C Price of the
good is constant. D There are no changes in tastes and preferences
Ans- C
Short run supply curve - Its marginal cost curve where price is greater than
average variable costs
7. A price ceiling set above the equilibrium market price will result in: A Market
failure B Excess supply over demand C Market equilibrium D Excess
demand over supply
Ans- C If the price ceiling is above the equilibrium market price, it will not
interfere with the working of the price mechanism. The market will not be forced
from its current equilibrium. A price ceiling only affects the workings of the price
mechanism if the ceiling is set below the equilibrium price.
8.
Which one of the following would normally cause a rightward shift in the
demand curve for a product? A A fall in the price of a substitute product B A
reduction in direct taxation on incomes C A reduction in price of the product
D An increase in the price of a complementary product
Ans- B A reduction in income tax will increase 'real' household income, and so
demand for normal products will shift to the right, ie quantity demanded will be
greater at any given price.
A fall in the price of a substitute good would entice consumers away from the
original good. This would cause a leftward shift in the demand curve.
A change in the price of the good itself does not cause a shift in the curve but a
movement along it.
Complementary products tend to be bought and used together, so an increase in
the price of one will lead to a reduction in demand for the other, reflected in a
leftward shift in the demand curve
6th qus of 4th chapter
9. If the absolute value of the price elasticity of demand for dry white wine is
greater than one, a decrease in the price of all wine would result in: A A more
than proportional decrease in the quantity of dry white wine purchased B A
less than proportional decrease in the quantity of dry white wine purchased
C A less than proportional increase in the quantity of dry white wine
purchased D A more than proportional increase in the quantity of dry white
wine purchased
Ans- D Assuming a normal good, a decrease in price results in a greater quantity
being demanded. Given that demand is price elastic, the increase in quantity will be
proportionally greater than the price fall.
10.Which combination of demand and supply curves would be appropriate for a
firm attempting to increase its profits by increasing its market share? A
Inelastic demand, inelastic supply B Elastic demand, elastic supply C
Inelastic demand, elastic supply D Elastic demand, inelastic supply
Ans- B To increase market share requires greater quantities of the firm's products to
be both demanded and supplied. To sell more, a firm needs to lower price. For this
to be profitable, demand must be elastic. To produce more, supply must also be
elastic.
11.When demand is price elastic, a fall in price will increase total spending on
the good
Qus 7th of 5th chap
12.Which of the following statements is always true if an indirect tax is imposed
on a good or service
A The price will rise by an amount equal to the tax B The producer will bear
more of the tax than the consumer C The price rise will be smaller the
greater the price elasticity of demand is D The price rise will be greater the
greater the price elasticity of demand is
Ans- C The price rise will be lower for products with a higher price elasticity
of demand. In the extreme case, if demand is perfectly elastic, there will be
no increase in the price at all.
All producers sell at the same price because the product is homogenous eg farming
Monopoly- how does a mnonpoly decide price of the product ? ans either they fix
the price & let demand determine the amt supplied or fix the supply and let dd
determine the price , the price is likely to be higher and qty supplied lower , no
allocative and tech efficiency , economies of scale , the price may be lower than the
perfect competition
Price discrimination may be by time ( weekends or weekdays ) , customer , income
, place .
At least 2 diff markets , a market imperfection & diff elasticities
Specific industry regulators can set price caps & reduce barriers to entry
Monopsony a market with single supplier
A monopoly has very high avg fixed costs
In perfect co all producers charge the same price because products r homogenous
Price discrimination in monopoly can be used to increase output and reduce
allocative inefficiency
Firms only produce at full capacity under perfect co
Oligopoly markets do not show price co because producers decisions r
interdependent
A monoplosits AR curve falls downward because market dd increases as price falls
Currency bloc EU , groups of countries fix their exchange rate against a major
currency
In a mixed economy there are pvt and public sector
ROCE =Profit before interest and tax (PBIT) * 100 / avg cap employed
Profit before interest and tax, or profit from operations, is profit available for all
holders of capital (shares and loans). Capital employed is defined as total assets
less current liabilities.
Return on net assets =Operating profit (before interest and tax)*100/ Total assets
minus current liabilities
Earnings per share (EPS) is usually regarded as a measure of how well the company
has performed for its equity shareholders specifically , ROCE is a more general
measure of the overall productivity of capital.) ie for both lenders and sh holders
EPS =Profit after tax and preference dividends(Profit available for ordinary
shareholders ) / Number of equity shares issued ( remember these have to shs
issued fig not the fig of authorized shs )
Price earnings (P/E) ratio ( multiple ratio ) = Market price per share/ EPS
he P/E ratio is interesting in that it reflects shareholder opinion about company
prospects because it shows, in effect, the number of years' worth of earnings from a
share that would be needed to make up the price of buying a share. A high P/E
number indicates that investors are content with a relatively low current return from
the share. This is usually because they anticipate that their return will improve
substantially in the future, possibly as a result of emerging opportunities or new and
impressive products. A high P/E ratio shows that the market is confident about the
future prospects of the company.
the measure for EPS we looked at earlier only looks at earnings per share, it doesn't
take into account the price an investor would have to pay to acquire the share. The
earnings yield addresses this shortcoming by comparing the earnings per share with
the market price of the share
Earnings yield = EPS*100/ market price of the sh
ROCE and EPS are both based on historical accounting information. As a result, their
usefulness is greatest as measures of how a company has performed in the recent
past , p/e looks into recent future
Measure of long term -Cost of capital is the minimum acceptable return on an
investment ( disc factor )
There are two ways to measure this - expected future dividends , free cash flow to
equity
We assume that a constant dividend will be paid each year into the indefinite future.
This dividend valuation model shows the from pg 29 to 34
The present value of Megalith's forecast future cash flows is now $267 million. What
will happen to this value if Megalith plc's cost of equity rises? It will fall. The cost of
equity is the discount rate for this calculation. An increase in the discount rate used
for a present value calculation will inevitably produce a fall in the present value
computed.
fixed costs = 0, because fixed costs do not change when one extra unit of output is
produced
Total variable costs therefore vary with output in the short run as well as in the long
run.
(a) the sgort run variable cost per unit is more or less constant (eg wages costs
and materials costs per unit of output are unchanged). If the average fixed
cost per unit is falling as output rises, and the average variable cost per unit
is constant, it follows that the average total cost per unit will also be falling as
output increases
(b) However, there are other reasons for the initial fall in average total cost. The
first is the effects of the division of labour and specialisation.
(c) The second reason is the utilisation of indivisibilities.
It is important that you appreciate that diminishing returns set in once the rate at
which the increase in productivity from adding an extra unit of a factor of production
starts to fall. This does not necessarily mean, however, that total output has started
to fall.
If output increases more than in proportion to inputs (for example doubling all
inputs trebles output) there are beneficial economies of scale. Economies of scale
mean that the long run average costs of production will continue to fall as the
volume of output rises.
If output increases in the same proportion as inputs (for example doubling all inputs
doubles output) there are said to be constant returns to scale.
Tech eco - Dimensional economies of scale arise from the relationship between the
volume of output and the size of equipment (eg storage tanks) needed to hold or
process the output. Technical economies arise in the production process. They are
also called plant economies of scaleA large firm also benefits from economies of
scale by overcoming indivisibilities
internal economies of scale are potentially more significant than external economies
to a supplier of a product or service for which there is a large consumer market.
External economies of scale are potentially significant to smaller firms who
specialise in the ancillary services to a larger industry
it is generally accepted that in any industry there is a minimum efficient scale of
production which is necessary for a firm to achieve the full potential economies of
scale
in the short run a firm will carry on producing provided its total revenue exceeds
total variable costs because this means it is making a contribution towards fixed
costs.
In the long run, by definition, there are no fixed costs, so all costs are variable.
Therefore, in the long run a firm will only carry on producing if total revenue is
greater than or equal to total cost, or if average revenue (price) is greater than or
equal to average cost. This means that, in the long run, a firm will only carry on
producing if it is making at least a normal profit
Conglomerate diversification. A company might take over or merge with another
company in a completely different business altogether. This form of merger is
diversification
Horizontal expansion or integration
Advantages Economies of scale from larger production quantities, ie lower costs.
Technical economies (use of larger machines or more specialised machines)
Managerial economies (greater specialisation of middle managers) Commercial
economies (bulk buying and selling) Financial economies (ability to borrow money
more cheaply) Risk-bearing economies (some greater spread of products made
within the same general market should help the firm to spread its risks)
Knowledge economies (consolidating research and development facilities to
advance technical knowledge) To increase market share with the possibility of
achieving monopoly or oligopoly status, and so having greater influence in the
market and chance to earn supranormal profits and raise prices.
Disadvantages Top management might be unable to handle the running of a large
firm efficiently, ie there might be management diseconomies of scale. The
creation of a monopoly will be unacceptable to government
Vertical integration
Advantages Gives the firm greater control over its sources of supply (backward
vertical integration) or over its end markets (forward vertical integration). This
should improve cost efficiency between the various stages of production, because
there are no longer third parties trying to make a profit It should also increase the
reliability of supplies (which is an important requirement for flexible manufacturing
techniques) By increasing control over the sources of supplies and/or the sales
and distribution network, a firm can increase barriers to entry stopping new
entrants joining the industry. Achieves financial economies of scale and possibly
some commercial economies. Otherwise few economies of scale unless production
now becomes better co-ordinated through its various stages.
Disadvantages Possible management diseconomies of scale, owing to lack of
familiarity with businesses acquired.
Diversification
Advantages Risks are spread by operating in several industries. If one industry
declines, others may thrive. Economies of scale in finance and administration.
Expertise can be shared across areas which would previously have been
unconnected.
Disadvantages No technical or commercial economies of scale. Possible
management diseconomies of scale, owing to lack of familiarity with businesses
acquired.
5 Which of the following cannot be true? In the short run, as output falls: A Average
variable costs falls B Average total cost falls C Average fixed cost falls D Marginal
costs falls
6 The tendency for unit costs to fall as output increases in the short run is due to
the operation of: A Economies of scale B The experience of diminishing marginal
returns C Falling marginal revenue D Increasing marginal returns
Ans - 5 C If output falls, fixed costs are divided over a smaller number of units,
therefore average fixed costs will rise. (It may help you to draw a diagram of the
cost curves, to illustrate this.) 6 D The benefits of specialisation and the division of
labour could allow increasing marginal returns Economies of scale only operate in
the long run. B results in rising unit costs in the short run. C is nothing to do with
costs.
changes in demand caused by changes in price are represented by movements
along the demand curve, from one point to another. These changes in quantity
demanded in response to a change in price are called expansions or contractions in
demand. The price has changed, and the quantity demanded changes (prompting a
movement along the curve), but the demand curve itself remains the same.
Factors determining demand for a good The price of the good The size of
households' income (income effect) The price of other substitute goods
(substitution effect) Tastes and fashion Expectations of future price changes
The distribution of income among households.
A demand curve shows how the quantity demanded will change in response to a
change in price provided that all other conditions affecting demand are unchanged
that is, provided that there is no change in the prices of other goods, tastes,
expectations or the distribution of household income.
Shifts of the demand curve , when there is a change in the conditions of demand,
the quantity demanded will change even if price remains constant.
Short run supply curve
If we assume there is a single, constant selling price for all firms, then a firm's
average revenue (AR) and marginal revenue (MR) will be identical. We can show this
as Price = Average Revenue = Marginal Revenue. We know that the firm will supply
if pricing policy is to maximise net social benefit then it also needs to include
externalities when calculating costs.
Figure 1 shows two possibilities. (a) If a free market exists, the amount of the good
produced will be determined by the interaction of demand (curve D) and supply
curve S. Here, output would be Y, at price Py (b) If social costs are taken into
account, and the market operated successfully, the supply curve should shift
leftwards, and the amount of the good produced should be X, at price Px. As we will
see in detail in a later chapter, the profit maximising level of production for a firm
(and therefore the level of production a firm will aim for) is that where marginal cost
equals marginal revenue. If a firm's private costs are adjusted to take account of
social costs, its optimum level of production will still occur when MC = MR, but now
marginal cost also includes the cost to society of producing an extra unit of output.
This is the concept of social marginal costs.
Pg 124 fig
Some goods, by their very nature, involve so much 'spill-over' of externalities that
they are difficult to provide except as public goods whose production is organised by
the government. , non exclusive
Merit goods are considered to be worth providing to everyone irrespective of
whether everyone can afford to pay for them, because their consumption is in the
long-term public interest. Education is one of the chief examples of a merit good.
Merit goods are different from public goods in that they are divisible
Indirect taxes are levied on expenditure on goods or services as opposed to direct
taxation which is applied to incomes. A selective indirect tax is imposed on some
goods but not on others (or is imposed at a higher rate on some goods than on
others).
Indirect taxation may be used to improve the allocation of resources when there are
damaging externalities. If an indirect tax is imposed on a good, the tax will shift the
supply curve upwards (leftwards) by the amount the tax adds to the price of each
item. This is because although the price to consumers includes the tax, the revenue
the suppliers receive is only the net-of-tax price
Pg 128 to 131
6 Which of the following are weaknesses of a completely free-enterprise economic
system? 1 It only reflects private costs and private benefits; 2 It may lead to serious
inequalities in the distribution of income and wealth; 3 It may lead to production
inefficiencies and a wastage of resources.
A 1 and 2 only B 2 and 3 only C 1 and 3 only D 1, 2 and 3
When a firm can sell all its extra output at the same price, the AR 'curve' will be a
straight horizontal line on a graph. The marginal revenue per unit from selling extra
units at a fixed price must be the same as the average revenue (see Figure 1). If the
price per unit must be cut in order to sell more units, then the marginal revenue per
unit obtained from selling extra units will be less than the previous price per unit
(see Figure 2). In other words, when the AR is falling as more units are sold, the MR
must be less than the AR.
Fig 1 and 2 on pg 136
Note that in Figure 2, at any given level of sales, all units are sold at the same price.
The firm has to reduce its selling price to sell more, but the price must be reduced
for all units sold, not just for the extra units. This is because we are assuming that
all output is produced for a single market, where a single price will prevail.
Pg 138 to 141
'price takers', unable to influence the market price individually, perfect info ,
producers act to maximize their profits, There is no point charging a lower price
than the market price because the firm can sell all its output at the given price.
Thus the demand curve for the firm is perfectly elastic at price P1
Pg 143-147
Fig 12 on pg 148
Study the diagram in Figure 12 above. At what price and output level would the firm
maximise its sales revenue? Answer At the point where MR = 0. Price PZ and
output Z. Further sales will lead to negative MR, and hence a reduction in total
revenue.
It is important that you should understand what the MR and AR (demand) curves are
showing us in Figure 12. (a) At output quantity X, the marginal revenue earned from
the last unit produced and sold is MRX, but the price at which all the X units would
be sold is PX. This is found by looking at the price level on the AR curve associated
with output X. (b) Similarly, at output quantity Y, the marginal revenue from the last
unit produced and sold is MRY, but the price at which all Y units would be sold on
the market is, from the AR curve for Y output, PY. (c) At output Z, the marginal
revenue from the last unit produced is zero, and the price at which all Z units would
be sold is Pz. Total revenue will be maximised at Z. If any more units are sold, MR
will be negative, thereby reducing total revenue
The condition for profit maximisation is, as we have seen, that marginal revenue
should equal marginal cost (MC = MR). This is true for any firm. As long as marginal
revenue exceeds marginal cost, an increase in output will add more to revenues
than to costs, and therefore increase profits. A monopolist will have the usual Ushaped cost curves.
Invisibles
Trade in services Income (interest, profit,
Income is divided into two parts. (a) Income from employment of UK residents by
overseas firms (b) Income from capital investment overseas (such as dividends and
interest earned)
Transfers are also divided into two parts: (a) Public sector payments to, and receipts
from, overseas bodies , (b) Non-government sector payments to and receipts from
bodies such as the EU
Capital account The capital account balance is made up of public sector
flows of capital into and out of the country, such as government loans to
other countries.
Financial account The balance on the financial account is made up of
flows of capital to and from the non-government sector, such as direct
investment in overseas facilities; portfolio investment (in shares, bonds
and so on); and speculative flows of currency ('hot money'). Movements on
government foreign currency reserves are also included under this
heading. Similarly, if speculators buy up sterling in response to interest
rate or exchange rate movements, these 'hot money' movements will still
be shown as inflows in the financial account even though they are shortterm capital movements.
(b) Capital account (c) Financial account
Current a/c deficits resrves will drain out , depreciation in value , mport quotas will
be put up
[Note: A devaluation occurs when the value of a currency is lowered in a fixed
exchange rate system. A depreciation occurs when an exchange rate is reduced
under a floating exchange rate system.]
(Appreciation of a currency will have converse effects to those of a depreciation.)
The cost of imports would rise as a result of currency depreciation because more
domestic currency would be needed to obtain the foreign currency to pay for
imported goods. The volume of imports would fall, although whether or not the total
value of imports fell too would depend on the elasticity of demand for imports. (a) If
demand for imports is inelastic, the volume of demand would fall by less than their
cost goes up, so that the total value of imports would rise. (b) If demand for imports
is elastic, the total value of imports would fall since the fall in volume would
outweigh the increase in unit costs.
If a country imports raw materials and exports manufactured goods which are made
with those materials, the cost of imported raw materials will rise, and so producers
will have to put up their prices to cover their higher costs. There will be a net fall in
export prices, as explained above, but perhaps not by much.