Microeconomics
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9781259813337
Author: KARLAN, Dean S., Morduch, Jonathan
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education,
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Chapter 2, Problem 4RQ
To determine
To explain:
The
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What is the opportunity cost of one cake if we move from combination A to combination B?
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Alice and Bob are both capable of producing goods X and Y. In one hour, Alice can produce one unit of each good. In the same amount of time, Bob can produce two units of each good. If Alice and Bob have access to the same amount of time, calculate the difference between the slope of Alice's PPF and the slope of Bob's PPF. (round to two decimal places if necessary)
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- Suppose there are two individuals, Casey and Rick, who live in a very simplified world where only two goods are produced and consumed: rice and beans. The production opportunity cost for Casey is 4.00 kg4.00 kg of rice for every kilogram of beans. Rick has a production opportunity cost of 2.00 kg2.00 kg of rice for every kilogram of beans. Casey eventually realizes that, through trade, both individuals can be better off. Rick is willing to trade. What price can be settled between these two parties such that both individuals can enjoy more rice and beans? Give your answer to two decimals.arrow_forwardIf country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 100 units of good X. If country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 150 units of good Y. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 75 units of good X. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 125 units of good Y. Both countries have (linear) straight line PPFs. What is the opportunity cost of producing 50 units of Y in country B? (hint: your answer should be measured in the positive number of units of good X that must be given up - round your answer to two decimal places only if necessary)arrow_forwardIf country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 100 units of good X. If country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 150 units of good Y. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 75 units of good X. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 125 units of good Y. Both countries have (linear) straight line PPFs. If these countries were going to trade after specializing in their respective comparative advantages, which of the following trades would be considered to be mutually beneficial where BOTH countries gain from trade (and are strictly better off than in autarky, the situation where they both self-reliant and do not trade with one another)? trade at a rate of 3X for 4Y trade at a rate of 2X for 3Y trade at a rate of 5X for 8Y trade at a rate of 3X for 5Yarrow_forward
- If country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 100 units of good X. If country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 150 units of good Y. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 75 units of good X. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 125 units of good Y. Both countries have (linear) straight line PPFs. Which of the following must be true? check all that apply A and B have the same access to resources (inputs) A can produce more X than B with the same resources A can produce more Y than B could with the same resources B can produce Y at a lower opportunity cost than Aarrow_forwardIf country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 100 units of good X. If country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 150 units of good Y. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 75 units of good X. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 125 units of good Y. Both countries have (linear) straight line PPFs. Which of the following must be true? (check all that apply) A and B have the same access to resources A has the absolute advantage in producing Y A has the absolute advantage in producing X B has the comparative advantage in producing Yarrow_forwardIf country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 100 units of good X. If country A uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 150 units of good Y. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 75 units of good X. If country B uses all of its resources efficiently, it can produce a maximum of 125 units of good Y. Both countries have (linear) straight line PPFs. What is the opportunity cost of producing 10 units of X in country A? (hint: your answer should be measured in the positive number of units of good Y that must be given up - round your answer to two decimal places only if necessary)arrow_forward
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- When countries specialize in producing certain goods and then freely exchange those goods for other goods with different countries, what is the advantage? Group of answer choices Each country can consume at a point outside their production possibilities frontier. All people in each country will be better off than they would be if they did not trade. Each country can produce at a point outside their production possibilities frontier. Each country can produce and consume at a point outside their production possibilities frontier.arrow_forwardKen and Daniel always eat miso soup and sushi in exact proportions: Ken eats one miso per two sushi; Daniel eats two miso per one sushi. They throw away any extra soup or sushi as it would not give them any pleasure. Once, they were stuck in the office together for hours, marking students’ assignments. Ken had ten miso soups and two sushi with him; Daniel had two miso and ten sushi. (For the purpose of this question, assume that miso and sushi can be divided into little pieces so one-half miso or one-hundredth of sushi makes sense) a) Draw the Edgeworth box for Ken and Daniel. Please put Ken at the origin and Daniel“upside down”; put miso on the horizontal axis and sushi on the vertical one. Show their endowment pointarrow_forwardElif can produce 6 pies or 30cakes in 1 hour. Ahmet can produce 10 pies or 20 cakes in 1 hour. On the PPF lines, show what Elif produces and what Ahmet produces when they specialize. When they specialize and trade, what are the total gains from trade? If Elif and Ahmet share the total gains equally, which quantities of pies and cakes do they trade?arrow_forward
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