
5. Suppose marginal revenue is positive (MR>0). What does that tell us about the demand elasticity...
9. If a single strategy is always optimal, regardless of opponents' strategies, then it is a a. First-mover advantage b. A Nash equilibrium c. Prisoners Dilemma d. A dominant strategy 7. In a market with a monopolist, which of the following pricing strategies maximizes total social welfare (no deadweight loss)? a. Perfect price discrimination b. Block pricing C. Group price discrimination d. None of the above; all monopolist pricing strategies create a deadweight loss 8. In a market with a...
6. If a single strategy is always optimal, regardless of opponents' strategies, then it is a a. First-mover advantage b. A Nash equilibrium c. Prisoners Dilemma d. A dominant strategy 7. In a market with a monopolist, which of the following pricing strategies maximizes total social welfare (no deadweight loss)? a. Perfect price discrimination b. Block pricing C. Group price discrimination d. None of the above; all monopolist pricing strategies create a deadweight loss Questions 8, and 9 refer to...
1. Let demand be P(Q) = 6 - 2. What is the price elasticity of demand at Q = 4? a. E = C. b. E= E = -4 d. E= -2 2. Suppose we have 3 types of households each with private demand for a public good (like flood protection) of P1(Q) = 5, P2(Q) = 10 - Q, and P3(Q) = 20 – 2Q. What is the social demand curve for the range Q < 10? a. Ps(0=...
1. Suppose that demand is given by P=100-Q, marginal revenue is MR=100-2Q, and marginal cost (and average cost) is constant at 20. a. What single price will maximize a monopolist's profit? b. What will be the prices and quantity under two-part pricing? It involves a lump sum fee (e.g., membership fee) equal to the consumer surplus at competitive prices and user fees (i.e., unit price) equal to the competitive price. c. Now the monopolist has another group of consumers whose...
1. (0 A monopolist with cost function e(Q)-jo* faces a consumer whose demand functions are given by (a) [51 Suppose the monopolist cannot engage in any price discrimination. (b) [5) What is the deadweight loss (relative to the competitive market out (c) [5] Now, suppose price discrimination is possible. Find the monopolist's (d) [51 What information is required for the monopolist to be able to use Qi=20-P and Q-40-2P. Find the firm's optimal pricing strategy. Calculate the firm's Lerner index....
What does the income elasticity of demand tell us about the types of goods that consumers will buy?
1. Let demand be P(Q) = 6-Q. What is the price elasticity of demand at Q = 4? a. E = - b. E= - 2 C. E = -4 d. ε = -2 2. Suppose we have 3 types of households each with private demand for a public good (like flood protection) of P1(Q) = 5, P2(Q) = 10 - Q, and P3(Q) = 20 – 2Q. What is the social demand curve for the range Q < 10?...
1. Let demand be P(Q) = 6 ---Q. What is the price elasticity of demand at Q = 4? 1 a. E = — 4 1 C. b. E =- 2 E = -4 d. E = -2 2. Suppose we have 3 types of households each with private demand for a public good (like flood protection) of P (Q) = 5, P2(Q) = 10 - Q, and P3(Q) = 20 – 2Q. What is the social demand curve for...
Microeconomics
[20] A monopolist with cost function c(Q) demand functions are given by. faces a consumer whose Q1=20-P and Q2-40-2P. (a) [5] Suppose the monopolist cannot engage in any price discrimination. Find the firm's optimal pricing strategy. Calculate the firm's Lerner index. come) associated with this pricing strategy, if any? optimal third-degree price-discrimination strategy. Which consumer is (b) [5] What is the deadweight loss (relative to the competitive market out- (c) [5] Now, suppose price discrimination is possible. Find the...
Uniform pricing monopolist has the following demand curve for its product: C(Q)=20Q, P=100-Q. The Marginal Cost is MC=20 and the Marginal Revenue is MR=100-2Q. 1. Find the monopolist Quantity and Price. 2.Find the Deadweight loss relative to the perfectly competitive outcome. 3. A. Calculate the welfare for the monopoly market, before and after the introduction of a price ceiling. B. Which scenario do the consumers prefer?