ECNB , Spring 2003 Intermediate Microeconomics Saint Louis University. Midterm 2

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, Spring 2003 Intermediate Microeconomics Saint Louis University Multiple Choice (4 points each) Midterm 2 Name: 1) If Fred's marginal rate of substitution of salad for pizza equals -3, then A) his marginal utility from last pizza is three time of his marginal utility from last salad. B) he would give up three pizzas to get the next salad. C) he will eat three times as much pizza as salad. D) he will eat three times as much salad as pizza. 2) The marginal rate of transformation of y for x equals A) the slope of the budget constraint (when y is on the vertical axis). B) the rate at which the consumer must give up y to get one more x. C) - P x /P y. D) All of the above. 3) If the price of X increases and the price of Y and income stay fixed, what will happen to the budget line? A) The budget line rotates inward from the intercept on the Y-axis. B) The budget line rotates outward from the intercept on the Y-axis. C) The budget line shifts inward without a change in slope. D) Nothing. Figure 1 4) Max has allocated $100 toward meats for his barbecue. His budget line and an indifference map are shown in Figure 1. Which bundle will Max choose?

A) a B) b C) c D) d Figure 2 5) Figure 2 shows Larry's indifference map and budget lines for ham and pork. Which of the following statements is TRUE? A) Both ham and pork are inferior goods. B) Ham is a normal good and pork is an inferior good. C) Neither pork nor ham is an inferior good. D) Pork is a normal good and ham is an inferior good. Figure 3 6) When John's income was low, he could not afford to dine out and would respond to a pay raise by purchasing more frozen dinners. Now that his income is high, a pay raise causes him - 2 -

to dine out more often and buy more frozen dinners. Which graph in Figure 3 best represents John's Engel curve for frozen dinners? A) Graph A B) Graph B C) Graph C D) Graph D 7) In response to an increase in the wage rate, the substitution effect will cause a person to A) supply the same hours of labor. B) supply fewer hours of labor. C) supply more hours of labor. D) have a backward bend in her labor supply curve. Figure 4 8) Figure 4 shows the short-run production function for Albert's Pretzels. The law of diminishing marginal productivity A) first appears with the second worker. B) first appears with the fourth worker. C) first appears with the fifth worker. D) has not yet appeared for any of the levels of labor. 9) The flatter an isoquant is (K is on the vertical axis) A) the greater is the substitutability between capital and labor. B) the greater is the marginal productivity of labor relative to that of capital. C) the greater is the marginal productivity of capital relative to that of labor. D) the greater is the level of output. - 3 -

Figure 5 10) Figure 5 shows the isoquants for producing steel. Decreasing returns to scale are A) present between producing 5,000 to 10,000 tons. B) present between producing 10,000 to 20,000 tons. C) present between producing 20,000 to 25,000 tons. D) never present. Essays and Calculations 11) Lisa consumes only pizzas and burritos. Her optimal choice is 3 pizzas and 5 burritos per week. At her optimal bundle, her marginal utility of pizza is 20 and her marginal utility of burrito is 10. The price of a pizza is $4. i. Describe the condition for Lisa s optimal choice in English and also using P B, P Z, MU B, and MU Z (this is apparently an interior solution). (5 points) ii. Can you determine the price of a burrito? (5 points) - 4 -

12) Ms. Tess Taker has a weekly income of $42, which she allocates between movies, at $6 per movie, and boxes of six-packed soda, at $6 per box. Below is her total utility (TU) schedule for each good. Movie ($6 per each) Soda ($6 per box) Quantity TU Quantity TU 0 0 0 0 1 62 1 75 2 114 2 117 3 156 3 149 4 188 4 179 5 210 5 206 i. Suppose Ms. Taker chooses 5 movies and 2 boxes of soda. What is the marginal utility of the last dollar spent on each good. (5 points) ii. Explain why this is not the combination which maximizes Ms. Taker s total utility subject to her budget constraint. Should she consume more movies or soda, why? (5 points) iii. Which combination of movies and soda gives her the maximal total utility? Explain why this is her optimal choice in terms of your answer to question 11.i. (5 points) - 5 -

13) When the price of good X decreases, a consumer s buying behavior changes. There are two components: the substitution effect and the income effect. i. Is the substitution effect positive or negative in this case? Why is it positive or negative? (5 points) ii. The Engel curve describes the relationship between two variables. Which two (price, quantity demanded, quantity supplied, income, cost, profit, )? The consumer s Engel curve for good X is downward sloping. Is X a normal good or inferior good? (5 points) iii. Explain, using the substitution and income effects, when is the total effect positive and when is it negative? (5 points) iv. Use a graph (good X on the horizontal axis and Y on the vertical) to illustrate the case when the total effect is positive. Hint: Draw the budget constraint BC 1 with the old price. Draw an indifferent curve and mark the optimal choice e 1. Draw the new budget constraint BC 2 with the lower price of X. Draw an indifference curve and mark the new choice e 2. Find the reference point e* and show with arrows the substitution, income, and total effects on the horizontal axis. (5 points) - 6 -

14) Alex and Allison both receive a wage rate w 1 for each working hour. We know that leisure is a normal good to both of them. Now their boss increases their wage to w 2. After hearing this raise, Alex decides to work more and Allison decides to work less. i. Can you explain the difference in their decision using the substitution and income effects (on leisure)? (5 points) ii. Draw a graph (goods on the vertical axis and leisure on the horizontal) to illustrate Allison s decision. Hint: Draw the budget constraint BC 1 with wage rate w 1. Draw an indifference curve and mark the optimal choice e 1. Draw the new budget constraint BC 2 with the new wage rate w 2. Draw an indifference curve and mark the new choice e 2. Find the reference point e* and label with arrows the income, substitution, and total effects on the horizontal axis. (5 points) iii. Explain how you choose the reference point e*. Hint: Is Allison facing the old or the new wage, enjoying the old or the new utility level? (5 points) - 7 -