Suppose that the perfectly competitive chicken industry is in long-run equilibrium at a price of $3 per pound of chicken and a quantity of 600 million pounds per year. Suppose the Surgeon General issues a report saying that eating chicken is good for your health. The Surgeon General's report will cause consumers to demand chicken at every price. In the short run, firms will respond by . Shift the supply curve, the demand curve, or b
Suppose that the perfectly competitive chicken industry is in long-run equilibrium at a price of $3 per pound of chicken and a quantity of 600 million pounds per year. Suppose the Surgeon General issues a report saying that eating chicken is good for your health. The Surgeon General's report will cause consumers to demand chicken at every price. In the short run, firms will respond by . Shift the supply curve, the demand curve, or b
Microeconomics: Private and Public Choice (MindTap Course List)
16th Edition
ISBN:9781305506893
Author:James D. Gwartney, Richard L. Stroup, Russell S. Sobel, David A. Macpherson
Publisher:James D. Gwartney, Richard L. Stroup, Russell S. Sobel, David A. Macpherson
Chapter10: Price-searcher Markets With Low Entry Barriers
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 16CQ
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Suppose that the perfectly competitive chicken industry is in long-run equilibrium at a price of $3 per pound of chicken and a quantity of 600 million pounds per year. Suppose the Surgeon General issues a report saying that eating chicken is good for your health.
The Surgeon General's report will cause consumers to demand chicken at every price. In the short run, firms will respond by .
Shift the supply curve, the demand curve, or both on the following diagram to illustrate these short-run effects of the Surgeon General's announcement.
Note: Select and drag one or both of the curves to the desired position. Curves will snap into position, so if you try to move a curve and it snaps back to its original position, just drag it a little farther.
In the long run, some firms will respond by until .
Shift the supply curve, the demand curve, or both on the following diagram to illustrate both the short-run effects of the Surgeon General’s announcement and the new long-run equilibrium after firms and consumers finish adjusting to the Surgeon General's announcement.
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