Answer
P=30
Qd=7 million
Qs=3 million
Qd>Qs so there is a shortage and the shortage push the price to
go up to the level where Qd=Qs which is $50 from the graph
Option A
The graph illustrates the market for concert tickets Price (dollars per concert ticket) Suppose the current...
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The graph illustrates the market for concert tickets. Price (dollars per concert ticket) 100 Suppose the current price of a concert ticket is $90 and 1 million concert tickets a year are bought. S 80- J What do you predict will happen to the price of a concert ticket? 60- 50 40- A. The surplus of concert tickets forces the price down. B. The shortage of concert tickets forces the price up. O C. The price will not change...
The graph illustrates the market for magazine subscriptions. Price (dollars per magazine subscription) 100- Suppose the current price of a magazine subscription is $70 and 3 million magazine subscriptions a year are bought. S 80- What do you predict will happen to the price of a magazine subscription? 60- A. The shortage of magazine subscriptions forces the price up 50 B. It is impossible to say what will happen to the price of a magazine subscription. 40- C. The surplus...
If the equilibrium price for tickets to a Taylor Swift concert is $100 each and she sells them for $80, a. Does she create a market surplus or shortage? O Shortage O Surplus O Neither a shortage nor surplus b. Suppose scalpers buy 10,000 tickets and resell them for $100 each. How much profit do the scalpers earn?
Question 12 Exhibit 5-6 Demand curve for concert tickets 40 Price per 30 ticket (dollars) 20 Demand curve 0 10 20 30 40 Quantity of tickets per concert (thousands) In Exhibit 5-6, if promoters lower their ticket price form $30 to $20, then: people will continue to buy the same number of tickets customers will spend less total money on concert tickets Othey will receive less money from their ticket sales both ticket sales and total revenue will rise
number 2 a-d
1) Suppose the second-hand market for concert tickets is perfectly competitive and there are primarily 10 online websites where consumers can buy tickets. The following describes the market demand for concerts and the cost of selling tickets. Market Demand: Q = 480 - 4p. Cost to Fim: (q) = 2.57% + 100. Market Structure: Perfect Competition with N = 10 in the short-run. 2) In the above question, suppose Ticketmaster bought all the second-hand ticketing websites, so...
Figure 10-3 Supply Price (dollars per ticket) 10 Demand 200 Quantity (tickets per day) Bettye Babylon does not charge admission to her arboreal estate, the Hanging Gardens. Due to space limitations, Bettye only allows 200 visitors per day at her estate. The figure represents the supply and demand for admission to the Hanging Gardens. Refer to Figure 10-3. At a ticket price of $0, the marginal benefit from the 200th ticket is above the price. below the price. O negative....
Quality demanded Price (thousands of (dollars per ticket) tickets per week) 10 1 00 200 6 300 400 200 6) The table above provides information about the demand for tickets. Based on the information: a. What ticket price should you charge to maximize revenues? b. What is the elasticity of demand between $6 and 84, using the midpoint method? c. How does the price elasticity of demand change in size as the price goes down from $10 to $8. from...
i need help with number 2 a- d
1) Suppose the second-hand market for concert tickets is perfectly competitive and there are primarily 10 online websites where consumers can buy tickets. The following describes the market demand for concerts and the cost of selling tickets. Market Demand: Q = 480 - 4p. Cost to Fim: c(q) = 2.57% + 100. Market Structure: Perfect Competition with N = 10 in the short-run. 2) In the above question, suppose Ticketmaster bought all...
The graph shows the demand curve for DVDs. Price (dollars per DVD) Suppose the price of a DVD is $30. Draw an arrow that shows the consumer surplus on the 1 millionth DVD bought. Consumer surplus is Market price O A. equal to the amount that we pay for a good or service O B. measured as the marginal benefit (or value) of a good minus the price paid for it, summed over the quantity bought OC. the value that...
The figure to the right illustrates the market for apples in which the government has imposed a price floor of $12 per crate. How many crates of apples will be sold after the price floor has been imposed? 12 million crates of apples per year. (Enter your response as an integer.) Will there be a shortage or surplus? If there is a shortage or surplus, how large will it be? There will be a surplus of 18 million crates of...