Perfectly Competitive Output Markets - AP Microeconomics

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Question

One characteristic of a public good is non-excludability. Which of the following is an example of a non-excludable good?

Answer

It is impossible to prevent people from enjoying clean air (assuming the air is clean, of course). Fish stocks are a common resource accessible to all (although there may be some attempts to limit access by government).

You can be excluded from satellite TV if you don't pay for the service.

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Question

Energy can be generated using either coal or natural gas as an input. If the supply of coal is interrupted, what are the most likely effects on the price and quantity of natural gas traded on the open market? Assume a perfectly competitive market with no government policy intervention.

Answer

Coal and natural gas are substitutes for each other based on the description given in the question. Therefore, an interruption in the supply of coal will lead to an increase in the demand for natural gas. This will increase both the price and quantity of natural gas.

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Question

Iron ore is an important input in steelmaking. If the cost of iron ore increases, what are the likely effects on the equilibrium price and quantity in the market for steel? Assume a perfectly competitive market.

Answer

An increase in the cost of iron ore will make steel production more expensive.

Because production costs increase, steelmakers will be less willing to produce steel at any given price. Therefore, the market price of steel will increase, and less steel will be traded on the market.

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Question

Which of the following scenarios will result in an increase in the market price for iron ore?

Answer

We need to choose the scenario that results in a higher equilibrium price. This will result from an increase in demand and a decrease in supply. Only one answer choice matches this scenario. The other choices create a lower equilibrium price or an ambiguous change.

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Question

Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of a perfectly competitive market?

Answer

Perfectly competitive markets are characterized by their LACK of entry and exit barriers, which makes it easy for firms to enter or leave the market as conditions change.

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Question

The following are characteristics of a perfectly competitive market. Among these, which is most clearly lacking in the market for used cars?

Answer

Although few real-life markets meet the characteristics of perfect competition exactly, the lack of perfect (or even equal) information about the goods being traded stands out in the used car market. When dealing in used cars, the seller typically has much more information about the quality of the car than the buyer.

The other answers more or less fit the perfect competition model. There are many buyers and sellers, the property rights of the buyer and seller are well defined, there are limited returns to scale (i.e. small used car sellers have not been competed out of existence), and factors of production (labor, land) can be put to other uses.

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Question

A food safety issue causes a temporary halt in the production of hot dogs at a significant number of firms. What is the expected effect on the equilibrium price and quantity for hot dog buns, assuming a perfectly competitive marketplace?

Answer

Hot dogs and hot dog buns are a model pair of complementary goods. Few people buy one without buying the other. You can graph the situation described using supply and demand curves for each market.

In the hot dog market, a significant decrease in supply will result in an inward shift of the supply curve which results in a higher price and fewer hot dogs being bought and sold.

The resulting effect in the market for hot dog buns, with fewer hot dogs being sold, is an inward shift in the demand curve, which results in a decrease in both the market price and quantity sold of hot dog buns.

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Question

Which of the following breakdowns in the rules of perfect competition is likely to result in a market externality?

Answer

Among the available choices, only poorly defined property rights is likely to result in an externality. For example, poorly defined intellectual property rights could result in firms not reaping the full benefit of their research and development and therefore doing less than is socially optimal.

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Question

If there is a bumper crop in cotton the same year that it becomes very fashionable and consumers begin to demand it over other fabrics, what is the likely effect on the market price and quantity traded?

Answer

Graph supply and demand curves to represent the market for cotton. The changes described would result in an outward shift of both the supply and demand curves. The new equilibrium would clearly have an increase in the quantity traded, but the equilibrium price would depend on the slope of the curves. Therefore, without more information, the effect on the market price is indeterminate.

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Question

Which of these actions most obviously produces a positive externality?

Answer

Keeping your yard clean and maintained is a positive quality that residents and visitors in your neighborhood will also benefit from. Some of the other answers are also positive, but they only have a private benefits, not public ones.

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Question

Which of these actions most obviously produces a negative externality?

Answer

Trashing your room really only affects you. Only littering, which affects the general public, is clearly a negative externality.

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Question

Reference this chart for the question below:

OutputTotal Cost ($)
110
215
319
424
530
638
749

The marginal cost of producing the 7th unit of output is:

Answer

The total cost of producing 7 units is $49. Since the total cost of producing 6 units is $38, the marginal cost of producing the 7th unit must be $11.

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Question

Reference this chart for the question below:

OutputTotal Cost ($)
110
215
319
424
530
638
749

If the market is perfectly competitive, and the market price of the good is $6, how many units should this supplier produce and sell on the market?

Answer

Marginal revenue equals marginal cost at $6 for the 5th unit produced. Total revenue equals total cost at both the 4th and 5th unit, but this is not the determining factor.

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Question

Sugar can be refined from either sugar cane or sugar beets. Which of the following would result in an increase in the market price of sugar cane, assuming perfect competition?

Answer

A sugar beet crop failure would result in an inward shift of the supply curve in the market for sugar beets, resulting in a higher equilibrium price.

Since sugar beets and sugar cane are substitutes, this would result in greater demand for sugar cane, which would result in a higher price for sugar cane as well.

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Question

Sugar can be refined from either sugar cane or sugar beets. If there is a larger-than-expected harvest in BOTH sugar cane and sugar beets, what is the effect on the equilibrium price and quantity in the market for sugar cane?

Answer

First, an increase in the supply of sugar beet results in a lower market price, and therefore lower demand for sugar cane, since they are substitutes. This translates into a lower market price and lower quantity traded for sugar cane.

Second, the increased supply of sugar cane would result in a lower market price and higher quantity traded in sugar cane. Therefore, the market price would definitely decrease, but the direction of the change in quantity cannot be determined.

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Question

Compared to a perfectly competitive market, a monopolist produces...

Answer

As seen in the graph below, the monopolist faces a downward sloping marginal revenue curve that is steeper than the demand curve. The monopolist produces where MC = MR which results in a higher price and lower output compared to where the marginal cost curve meets the demand curve, which is where equilibrium would be in a perfectly competitive market.

Monopolist

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Question

If a monopolist's marginal cost curve shifts down, what is the expected effect on price and quantity of the monopolist's output?

Answer

Although the monopolist will not end up producing at the socially optimal level, the effect of the change described is very similar to a shift in the supply curve in a perfectly competitive market.

Starting with the graph below as a baseline, you can see that if the marginal cost curve shifts down, the monopolist will produce at a point further along the marginal revenue curve, which would correspond to a greater output at a lower market price.

Monopolist

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Question

A natural monopoly arises when which of the following characteristics of a perfectly competitive market are not met?

Answer

A natural monopoly is defined by an industry where production is most efficient (i.e. lowest long-run average cost) when it is concentrated in a single firm. This implies increasing returns to scale, which is not characteristic of perfect competition. In other words, the natural monopolist will have a significant cost advantage over smaller competitors that try to enter the market.

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Question

A natural monopoly differs from a traditional monopoly in what way?

Answer

A natural monopoly is very similar to and experiences the same inefficiencies as a traditional monopoly. The difference is that these inefficiencies cannot be corrected by increasing competition, as a single seller can produce more efficiently than many sellers in a market that is a natural monopoly.

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Question

Assume that each of the following producers operates as a monopolist. Which one is most likely NOT a natural monopoly?

Answer

The electric company, railway, and telecoms operator are all examples of industries with very high fixed costs where the lowest average cost could only be achieved at a high level output, which discourages competition and is characteristic of natural monopoly.

The drug-maker operates as a monopoly due to the legal barrier (patent) that prevents entry into the market (for that specific drug). Therefore, it is NOT a natural monopoly.

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