This document provides examples and questions related to economic principles like opportunity cost, marginal analysis, and market equilibrium. It asks the reader to identify which principles are demonstrated by various scenarios, describe opportunity costs, use marginal analysis to make decisions, and determine whether market situations represent equilibrium or not. Government policies aimed at changing incentives are also discussed.
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PROBLEMS
Principles
1. In each of the following situations, identify which of the nine principles is at work.
a. You choose to shop at the local discount store rather than paying a higher price for the
same merchandise at the local department store.
b. On your spring vacation trip, your budget is limited to $35 a day.
c. The student union provides a website on which departing students can sell items such
as used books, appliances, and furniture rather than giving them away to their room-
mates as they formerly did.
d. You decide how many cups of coffee to have when studying the night before an exam
by considering how much more work you can do by having another cup versus how jit-
tery it will make you feel.
e. There is limited lab space available to do the project required in Chemistry 101. The lab
supervisor assigns lab time to each student based on when that student is able to come.
f. You realize that you can graduate a semester early by forgoing a semester of study
abroad.
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g. At the student union, there is a bulletin board on which people advertise used items for
sale, such as bicycles. Once you have adjusted for differences in quality, all the bikes
sell for about the same price.
h. You are better at performing lab experiments, and your lab-mate is better at writing lab
reports. So the two of you agree that you will do all the experiments, and she will write
up all the reports.
i. State governments mandate that it is illegal to drive without passing a driving exam.
2. Describe some of the opportunity costs when you decide to do the following.
a. Attend college instead of taking a job
b. Watch a movie instead of studying for an exam
c. Ride the bus instead of driving your car
3. Liza needs to buy a textbook for the next economics class. The price at the college bookstore
is $65. One online site offers it for $55 and another site for $57. All prices include sales
tax. The accompanying table indicates the typical shipping and handling charges for the
textbook ordered online.
a. What is the opportunity cost of buying online?
b. Show the relevant choices for this student. What determines which of these options
the student will choose?
Shipping Delivery Charge
method time
Standard shipping 3–7 days $3.99
Second-day air 2 business days 1$$8.98
Next-day air 1 business day $13.98
4. Use the concept of opportunity cost to explain the following.
a. More people choose to get graduate degrees when the job market is poor.
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b. More people choose to do their own home repairs when the economy is slow.
c. There are more parks in suburban areas than in urban areas.
d. Convenience stores, which have higher prices than supermarkets, cater to busy people.
e. Fewer students enroll in classes that meet before 10:00 A.M.
5. In the following examples, state how you would use the principle of marginal analysis to
make a decision.
a. Deciding how many days to wait before doing your laundry
b. Deciding how much library research to do before writing your term paper
c. Deciding how many bags of chips to eat
d. Deciding how many lectures of a class to skip
6. This morning you made the following individual choices: you bought a bagel and coffee at
the local café, you drove to school in your car during rush hour, and you typed your room-
mate’s term paper because you are a fast typist—in return for which she will do your laun-
dry for a month. In each of these actions, describe how your individual choices interacted
with the individual choices made by others. Were other people left better off or worse off
by your choices in each case?
7. On the east side of the Hatatoochie River lives the Hatfield family, while the McCoy fami-
ly lives on the west side. Each family’s diet consists of fried chicken and corn-on-the-cob,
and each is self-sufficient, raising their own chickens and growing their own corn. Explain
the conditions under which each of the following would be true.
a. The two families are made better off when the Hatfields specialize in raising chickens,
the McCoys specialize in raising corn, and the two families trade.
b. The two families are made better off when the McCoys specialize in raising chickens,
the Hatfields specialize in raising corn, and the two families trade.
8. Which of the following situations describes an equilibrium? Which does not? If the situa-
tion does not describe an equilibrium, what would an equilibrium look like?
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a. Many people regularly commute from the suburbs to downtown Pleasantville. Due to
traffic congestion, the trip is 30 minutes when you travel by highway, but only 15 min-
utes when you go by side streets.
b. At the intersection of Main and Broadway are two gas stations. One station charges
$1.15 per gallon for regular gas and the other charges $1.00 per gallon. Customers can
get service immediately at the first station, but must wait in a long line at the second.
c. Every student enrolled in Economics 101 must also attend a weekly tutorial. This year
there are two sections offered: section A and section B, which meet at the same time in
adjoining classrooms and are taught by equally competent instructors. Section A is
overcrowded, with people sitting on the floor and often unable to see the chalkboard.
Section B has many empty seats.
9. In each of the following cases, explain whether you think the situation is efficient or not.
If it is not efficient, why not? What actions would make the situation efficient?
a. Some residents in your dorm leave lights, computers, and appliances on when they are
not in their rooms.
b. Although they cost the same amount to prepare, the cafeteria in your dorm consistently
provides too many dishes that diners don’t like, such as tofu casserole, and too few dishes
that diners do like, such as roast turkey with dressing.
c. The enrollment for a particular course exceeds the spaces available. Some students who
need to take this course to complete their major are unable to get a space while others
who are taking it as an elective do get a space.
10. Discuss the efficiency and equity implications of each of the following policies. How would
you go about balancing the concerns of equity and efficiency in these areas?
a. The government pays the full tuition for every college student to study whatever subject
he or she wishes.
b. When people lose their jobs, the government provides unemployment benefits until
they find new ones.
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11. Governments often adopt certain policies in order to promote desired behavior among their
citizens. For each of the following policies, determine what the incentive is and what behav-
ior the government wishes to promote. In each case, why do you think that the government
might wish to change people’s behavior, rather than allow their actions to be solely deter-
mined by individual choice?
a. A tax of $5 per pack is imposed on cigarettes.
b. The government pays parents $100 when their child is vaccinated for measles.
c. The government pays college students to tutor children from low-income families.
d. The government imposes a tax on the amount of air pollution that a company
discharges.
12. In each of the following situations, explain how government intervention could improve
society’s welfare by changing people’s incentives. In what sense is the market going wrong?
a. Pollution from auto emissions has reached unhealthy levels.
b. Everyone in Woodville would be better off if streetlights were installed in the town. But no
individual resident is willing to pay for installation of a streetlight in front of his or her
house because it is impossible to recoup the cost by charging other residents for the benefit
they receive from it. I