Topic 5 – Demand‚ Supply and government policy (Week five Oct 6th – Oct 13th) Outline: 1. Price Ceiling: -- General Analysis; -- Example: Rent Control; 2. Price Floor: -- General Analysis; -- Example: minimum wage law; 3. The Incidence of Sales Tax -- Key Results; -- Numerical Examples: a)Tax levied on sellers; b)Tax levied on buyers; -- Elasticities of demand and supply; Price Ceiling A legal maximum on the price at which a good can be sold 1) General Analysis Price 12 PE 8 Shortage 16 QE
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20 0 Cook and Wait on Customers 2 2 Sam Meals Cooked per hour Customers Waited on per hour Wait Full Time 0 20 Cook and Wait on Customers 2 2 2. According to the above table‚ if Anne and Sam each worked separately‚ how many meals per hour would be served by both of them? a. b. c. d. e. 2 8 20 4* 40 3. By Anne and Sam cooperating‚ according to the above table‚ the number of meals served increased by a. b. c. d. e. 5 times.* 10 times
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differentials. Assess this argument. Intro: Labor market supply and demand‚ wage determination‚ wage differentials general‚ ECONOMIC THEORY OF WAGES P1: production of luxury goods vs. other normal/inferior/Giffen/Veblen goods. Demand for this good influenced by fashion and social factors (not necessity/ income as for the other goods) help determine what might be charged for product P2: how demand for a good can impact the demand and supply of labor through MR‚ marginal revenue product‚ effect of
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Because the government controls the number of medallions‚ market forces do not determine their price. 3. Indicate whether each of the following statements describes an increase in demand‚ decrease in demand‚ change in quantity demanded‚ increase in supply‚ decrease in supply‚ or change in quantity supplied in the given market. a. Store-brand soup prices are cut‚ reducing sales of Campbell’s soup. Market: Campbell’s soup. b. Coffee bean prices hit an 18-month
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Aggregate Demand and Supply Models Economic Critique Ken Drake‚ ECO 372 Macroeconomics September 10‚ 2012 Jason Foster Aggregate Demand and Supply Models Economic Critique In the United States the economy is currently in a recession‚ although signs are indicating that the economy is slowly recovering. In an effort to analyze the Unites States economy the unemployment rate‚ expectations‚ consumer income‚ and interest rates have been evaluated. The results of these evaluations are included
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include supply and demand‚ elasticity of demand‚ consumer behavior and utility maximization‚ and the costs of production both short-run and long-run. I will also be demonstrating the ability to clearly present views in written and/or oral expression. On the web‚ I will research additional information about the A-Phone and the Pomegranate. The task below also requires me to draw graphs of supply and demands increases and decreases. When the task is complete you will have learned about the demand curve
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ASSIGNMENT NUMBER 1 Question Number 1: Write the definitions of aggregate demand and aggregate supply. Answer: AGGREGATE DEMAND: Aggregate demand is the sum of all demand for final goods and services at a given time and price level. AGGREGATE SUPPLY: Aggregate supply is the sum of all final goods and services that will be supplied at a given time and price level. Question Number 2: Why does short run aggregate supply curve slope upward? Answer: Because profits rise when the prices of the goods
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“Effects of Taxes on Demand and Supply” Definition: A fee charged ("levied") by a government on a product‚ income‚ or activity. If tax is levied directly on personal or corporate income‚ then it is a direct tax. If tax is levied on the price of a good or service‚ then it is called an indirect tax. Overview: The legal definition and the economic definition of taxes differ in that economists do not consider many transfers to governments to be taxes. For example‚ some transfers to the public
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Coffee Supply‚ Demand‚ and Price Elasticity Team B: Walelia Naholowa’a‚ Priscilla Swanson‚ Delniece Williams‚ Nigel Sturge ECO/212 Robert Coates February 26‚ 2012 Coffee Supply‚ Demand‚ and Price of Elasticity Statistics show that over half of the American population consumes coffee on a daily basis. You may drink coffee hot‚ cold‚ mixed‚ or even in a frappuccino. Individuals are able to make coffee at home‚ or buy it on the go. Coffee provides people with caffeine‚ which ultimately
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Question 1 The table gives the supply schedules for jet-ski rides by three owners: Rick‚ Sam‚ and Tom‚ the only suppliers of jet-ski rides. Price (dollars per ride) | Quantity supplied (rides per week) | | Rick | Sam | Tom | 10.00 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 12.50 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 15.00 | 10 | 5 | 0 | 17.50 | 15 | 10 | 5 | 20.00 | 20 | 15 | 10 | a. What is each owner’s minimum supply-price of 10 rides a day? At the minimum supply price of $15‚ Rick determines to supply 10 rides a day b. Which owner has
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