maths lecture
maths lecture
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
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1. The total money M has two components, bank deposits D and cash
holdings C, which we use to bear an instant ratio CD < 1. The high-
powered money H is defined as the sum of cash holdings held by the
public and the reserves held by the banks. Bank reserves are a fraction
of bank deposits, determined by the reserve ratio z, 0 < z < 1.
M=C+D
We are given that cash holdings C are a fraction of deposits D, with the cash-deposit ratio c =
C/D. Thus:
C = cD
The high-powered money H is the sum of cash holdings C and bank reserves, which are a fraction
z of deposits D:
H = C + zD = cD + zD = D(c + z)
Solving for D:
D = H / (c + z)
M = C + D = cD + D = D(1 + c) = H(1 + c) / (c + z)
M = H(1 + c) / (c + z)
B. How Would an Increase in the Reserve Ratio z Affect the Money Supply?
An increase in the reserve ratio z would reduce the money supply. Since:
M = H(1 + c) / (c + z)
An increase in z increases the denominator (c + z), thereby reducing M, assuming H and c remain
constant.
C. How Would an Increase in the Cash-Deposit Ratio c Affect the Money
Supply?
An increase in the cash-deposit ratio c would also reduce the money supply. In the formula:
M = H(1 + c) / (c + z)
Q₁ = 40 + 2P₂ + P₃
Q₂ = 35 - P₁ - P₂
C = Q₁² + 2Q₂² + 10
A. Write out the profit function Q1 Q2) and find output levels that satisfy the necessary
conditions for maximum profit.
C. What is the maximal profit? Can you conclude that this is a unique absolute maximum
Problem Statement:
Given the demand and cost functions:
Q₁ = 40 + 2P₂ + P₃
Q₂ = 35 - P₁ - P₂
C = Q₁² + 2Q₂² + 10
A. Write out the profit function and find output levels that satisfy the
necessary conditions for maximum profit.
1. Total Revenue (TR):
To find the critical points, take the partial derivatives of Π with respect to P₁, P₂, and P₃, and set
them equal to zero.
These first-order conditions provide the necessary equations to find the output levels that
maximize profit. The system of equations is:
H=
[ -4 -3 1 ]
[ -3 -14 -4 ]
[ 1 -4 -2 ]
To determine if the Hessian is negative definite, check the leading principal minors:
1. H₁₁ = -4 (negative)
2. det([H₁₁, H₁₂; H₂₁, H₂₂]) = 47 (positive)
3. det(H) = 8 (positive)
Since not all leading principal minors alternate in sign, the Hessian is not negative definite.
Therefore, the second-order sufficient conditions are not satisfied, meaning we cannot confirm
whether the critical point is a maximum.
C. What is the maximal profit? Can you conclude that this is a unique
absolute maximum?
Since the second-order sufficient conditions are not met, we cannot conclude that the
critical point is a global maximum based on the Hessian test alone.
However, the critical point found from solving the system of equations in part A
corresponds to a stationary point. The exact maximal profit can be calculated by
substituting the critical values of P₁, P₂, and P₃ back into the profit function Π.
B. With the restriction that output is non-negative, is the profit function concave over it entire
domain? Is it convex over its entire domain?
C. if your answer to b above is "No" in both cases, find out the interval over which it concave, the
interval over which it is convex, and comment on the dividing line. If you Answer to b is
different, come up with your own function which has both concave an convex parts and describe
the situation.
A. Critical Values
To find the critical values, we need to take the first derivative of the profit function and
set it equal to zero:
B. Concavity
To determine if the profit function is concave or convex, we need to examine the second
derivative:
-240Q + 474 = 0
Q = 474 / 240 = 1.975
The dividing line between the concave and convex regions is at Q = 1.975.
Conclusion
The profit function has two critical values: Q ≈ 2.28 and Q ≈ 4.78. The function is:
This means that the profit function has a local maximum at Q ≈ 2.28 (where it changes
from convex to concave) and a local minimum at Q ≈ 4.78 (where it changes from
concave to convex).