Derive the short-run supply curve

Assignment Help Macroeconomics
Reference no: EM131316750

Question 1:

Suppose you are given the following information about an industry:

QD = 8000 - 100p;
QSSR= 20 + 700p;

c(q) = 20 + q2/20.

where q and c (q) stand for a firm's quantity supplied and cost function; QSRS stands for the short-run industry supply curve. QD is the market demand curve, for both the short run and long run.

Assume that all firms are identical, and that the market is characterized by perfect competition, in both the long run and short run.

a. Solve for the (i) quantity supplied and (ii) profit of each firm in the short run.

b. Based on your answer in part (a), would you expect to see entry or exit in the industry during the transition from the short run to the long run? What effect will firm entry or exit have on market prices and firm profits during the transition? Explain.

c. What is the lowest price firms will sell their goods at in the long run? In other words, what is the long-run industry supply curve? Explain.

d. Suppose the government requires all firms to pay a fixed license fee to enter the market. Without any calculation, can you predict what will happen to the equilibrium price, number of firms, and firm profits in the long run?

Question 2 :

Susan uses her income (m) to consumes two goods (1 and 2). The prices are denoted by p1 and p2. Her utility function is U(x1, x2) = x11/2x2

a. State Susan's Marshallian demand functions for both goods in terms of income and prices.

b. Suppose that the market prices are p1 = 1 and p2 = 3, and Susan has a budget equal to m = 60. She also receives from the government a $30 coupon, which can be used to purchase good 1 (but not good 2).

i. Compute her optimal consumption bundle (x*1, x*2), and associated level of utility.

ii. Draw her budget line without coupon, the budget line with coupon, and two indifference curves to (roughly) show your answers for part b (i).

iii. In this context, would Susan be better off if the government simply gives her cash (which she can spend on both goods) rather than coupons? Explain briefly.

c. Use the Lagrangian approach to derive her Hicksian demand functions (in terms of p1, P2, and U) for good 1 and 2, respectively.

d. Compute the highest level of utility that she can achieve by using m = 60.

e. Solve for the total effect, income effect, and substitution effect of an increase in px, in terms of m and prices, using the Marshallian and or Hicksian demand functions.

Question 3:

Consider a manufacturing plant that produces clothes using labor and capital. Its technology is summarized by the production function: y = AK1/2 + L1/2, where y is the number of clothes produced; A represents the level of the so-called capital-biased technology; K stands for the amount of capital used, while L stands for labor used. The rental cost and wage rate (with the right normalization) are both equal to 1.

a. Solve for the short-run demand function for labor, LSR (A, K, y). What is the marginal impact of an increase in A on K and LSR, respectively. Show your steps.

b. For y units of clothes, what are the

i. short-run total cost function (c);

ii. short-run marginal cost function (MC);

iii. short-run average variable cost function (AVC) in terms of A, K, and y.

c. Derive the short-run supply curve (p(y)). Remember to specify the shut-down condition.

Let us now consider the' long run, in which the firm can flexibly choose both capital and labor to minimize cost.

d. Derive the long-run cost function for the plant in terms of A and y, i.e., c(A, y). (Hint: replace both r and w by 1 before any derivation.)

e. Based on the cost curve, can you tell whether the technology exhibits increasing, de¬creasing, or constant returns to scale in the long run? Explain briefly.

f. How would a technological improvement affect the total cost of production for any level of output y?

g. How would a technological improvement affect the demand for capital relative to labor (i.e., K/L)? How can your answer shed light on the recent debate about how capital-biased technological advancement affects labor demand and potentially labor incomes?

Question 4:

Consider the market for soft drinks, which can be described by the following equations:

Demand function:

P = 10 - Q

Supply function:

P = Q - 2

where P is the price per can of soft drinks and Q is the quantity.

a. Solve for the perfectly competitive equilibrium price and quantity (in the absence of government intervention)?

b. Suppose that the government imposes a tax of $2 per unit to reduce the consumption of soft drinks. Draw the graph of supply and demand curves, with P on the vertical axis, to illustrate the pre-tax and post-tax equilibrium. Remember to label the values of the old equilibrium, and the intercepts of ALL demand and supply curves drawn.

c. Solve for the new equilibrium quantity, the price buyers pay (per can of soft drinks), and the price sellers receive (per can)?

d. Compute the changes in consumer surplus, producer surplus, government revenue, and deadweight loss associated with the tax.

e. Despite the deadweight loss you computed in part d, provide and discuss one reason for why a government may want to tax the consumption of soft drinks. What does your answer tell you about the limitation of using a static frictionless equilibrium model to study welfare implications of policies?

Question 5:

Suppose Celgene Corporation, a biotech company, is a monopoly in the market for a cancer medication. The total cost of producing Q units of drugs is

C(Q) = 2Q

(i.e., there is no fixed cost of production).

The demand for drugs is

Q = 30 - P

a. Find the level of output that maximizes Celgene's profits. What price would Celgene charge?

b. Suppose the government knows the demand and cost functions of the market. Find the price ceiling the government can impose to maximize social welfare (i.e. the sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus is maximized).

c. Provide one economic reason (not a political one) for why the US government would be very unlikely to impose such a price ceiling on Celgene in practice. Explain briefly.

Reference no: EM131316750

Questions Cloud

Define a multinational corporation : What additional factors must be considered by the manager of an MNC that a manager of a purely domestic firm is not forced to face?
Analyze the socio-demographics characteristics of country : Analyze the socio-demographics characteristics of your county.Identify three distinct statistical characteristics of your county and compare them to your observations;Explain how the actual socio-demographics contribution support or do not support y..
An exchange rate is quoted in terms of euros per pound : Explain how triangular arbitrage ensures that currency values are essentially the same in different markets around the world at any given moment.
Who benefits and who loses if yen appreciates against pound : In what sense is it a misnomer to refer to a currency as weak or strong? Who benefits and who loses if the yen appreciates against the pound?
Derive the short-run supply curve : What is the lowest price firms will sell their goods at in the long run? In other words, what is the long-run industry supply curve? Explain - Derive the short-run supply curve (p(y)). Remember to specify the shut-down conditio
Changes in currency values and inflation rates : What does it mean to say that a currency trades at a forward premium?- Explain how the law of one price establishes a relationship between changes in currency values and inflation rates.
Determine the type of each term t and expression e : Extend your SDD of (a) to translate expressions into post fix notation. Use the unary operator intToFloat to turn an integer into an equivalent oat.
List three goals you either have or would like to have : List 3 goals you either have, or would like to have (Financial, Fitness, Career, Education, Relationship, etc.) Use the S.M.A.R.T Goal format to further develop those goals.
Compute the profit or loss : Assuming that the actual exchange rate in six months is $0.5500/SF (SF1.8182/$), compute the profit or loss-and state which it is-CCE would experience if it had chosen to remain unhedged.

Reviews

Write a Review

Macroeconomics Questions & Answers

  Inflation targeting be a good policy

Why might it be difficult for the Fed to formally adopt inflation targeting?  Would inflation targeting be a good policy for the Fed in the present economic environment

  In using the taylor rule

In using the Taylor Rule as a guideline for monetary policy, what are the pros and cons of using forecasted values of inflation and output rather than observed values of these variables?

  Describe the present economic crisis situation in europe

Describe the present economic crisis situation in Europe.  Why has it been so difficult for the Europeans to find a solution to this problem?   Comment on what implications the crisis may have for the rest of the world if Europeans are not able to ag..

  Long-term federal government budget problems

Question:. Explain why there are long-term Federal government budget problems. Explain why the base-line forecast of the CBO is misleading.

  Derive and compare demand curve

Question based on Derive and compare demand curve,  Derive Ambrose's demand function for peanuts. How does it compare with Johnny's demand curve for peanuts?

  Problem based on utility function

Problem based on  Utility Function - Problem,  Answer and explain the following using a diagram which is completely labeled.

  Laffer curve : tax rate and tax revenue

Question based on Laffer Curve : Tax Rate and Tax Revenue,  Do raising tax rates necessarily raise tax revenue? What factors affect how tax revenue changes when tax rates change?

  Problem - income elasticity of demand

Problem - Income Elasticity of Demand,  Interpret the following Income Elasticities of Demand (YED) values for the following and state if the good is normal or inferior; YED= +0.5 and YED= -2.5

  Positive balance of payment

Question Positive Balance of Payment: "Things will look good for the US if we could just get to where we are consistently running a positive Balance of Payments."

  Effect of recession on the investment curve

Comment on the effect of a recession on the investment curve (only) and on the level of savings, investment, and the equilibrium real interest rate in the financial crisis that hits United States first starting in fall 2007.

  Affect of falling domestic investment on trade surplus and

How will a fall in domestic investment affect the trade surplus and net capital outflows in the domestic economy, the trade deficit and capital inflows in the rest of the world.

  Crises in the banking sector and bank run

Banking crises crisis decreases depositors' confidence in the banking system. What would be the effect of a rumor about a banking crisis on checkable deposits in such a country?

Free Assignment Quote

Assured A++ Grade

Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!

All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd