Transcript Question 8

Microeconomics
Course E
John Hey
Examinations
• Go to http://www.luiss.it/hey/microeconomia/esami.htm
• Read http://www.luiss.it/hey/microeconomia/detesen.htm
• Check on Answer Sheet
• Check on Aide/Memoire
• Check on grids
Aide-Memoire
Grids 1
Grids 2
Example 2 of Exams
Appello 2 Traccia 1
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1-4: demand and supply
5-7: Edgeworth Box
8,9: inferring preferences
10,11: competitive firm
12,13: compensating and equivalent
variations
• 14,15: risk
• 16,17: game theory
1-4: demand and supply
• Consider a market for a hypothetical good in
which there are a number of buyers and sellers,
each of which wants to buy or sell one unit of the
good. Assume that a buyer who is indifferent
about buying always buys and a seller who is
indifferent about selling always sells. The
reservation prices are given below, first for the
buyers and then for the sellers.
• Buyers: 6, 9, 10, 5, 8, 4, 8. Sellers: 2, 6, 5, 3, 4,
4, 3.
Question 1: What is the maximum total surplus generated in the market?
(a) 28
(b) 23
(c) 22
(d) 25
Question 2: What is the maximum number of trades (not necessarily with the
same price)?
(a) 6
(b) 7
(c) 5
(d) 8
Question 3: What price would the buyers choose if they could?
(a) 4
(b) 8
(c) 0
(d) 4
Question 4: What price would the sellers choose if they could?
(a) 10
(b) 5
(c) 8
(d) 4
Questions 5-7
• Consider, in an Edgeworth Box, exchange between two
individuals, Individual A and Individual B, with
preferences as specified below, endowed with two
goods, Good 1 and Good 2. (Consider only competitive
equilibrium in which at least one individual is better off
compared to the initial position.)
• Individual A has Perfect Complement preferences with
parameter a = 0.5. Individual B has Perfect Substitute
preferences with parameter a = 1. Total endowment of
good 1 is 8 and that of good 2 is 6.
• Individual A's endowment of good 1 is 0 and that of good
2 is 1.
Question 5: What is the competitive equilibrium price ratio?
(a) 1.00
(b) 1.50
(c) 1.33
(d) 3.50
Question 6: What is the quantity exchanged of good 1 to reach the
competitive equilibrium?
(a) 4.00
(b) 2.00
(c) 3.00
(d) 1.00
Question 7: What is the quantity exchanged of good 2 to reach the
competitive equilibrium?
(a) 1.00
(b) 1.50
(c) 2.00
(d) 3.00
Questions 8 and 9
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In the next two questions you will be asked to consider an individual who has the
following demands. You will be asked to infer his or her preferences, which will be
either Perfect Substitutes with parameter a, Perfect Complements with parameter a,
or Cobb-Douglas with parameter a.
With income 10.00 and at prices 1.00 and 2.00 the demands were 3.33 and 3.33.
With income 20.00 and at prices 1.00 and 0.50 the demands were 6.67 and 26.67.
With income 20.00 and at prices 2.00 and 2.00 the demands were 3.33 and 6.67.
Question 8: What are the individual's preferences?
Perfect Substitutes
There is not enough information
Cobb-Douglas
Perfect complements
Question 9: What is the value of the parameter a?
0.25
0.50
1.00
0.33
Questions 8 and 9
• Remember the following:
• With PS preferences the individual (except in
one special case) spends all his or her income
on the relatively cheaper of the two goods and
spends nothing on the other.
• With PC preferences the ratio of the quantities
q2/q1 bought is always equal to the parameter a.
• With CD preferences the amount spent on
Good 1 p1q1 is always a fraction a of income.
Questions 10 and 11
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In the next two questions you will be asked to consider a competitive firm
which has a cost function C(y) = a+ b*y + c*y^2 where a, b and c are given
below.
a = 20.0, b = 0.0, c = 1.0. Suppose that the price of the firm's output is 40.
Question 10: Determine the optimal output of the firm.
60.00
40.00
20.00
0.00
Question 11: What is the firm's profit?
380.00
0.00
800.00
1,619.76
Questions 12 and 13
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In the next two questions you will be asked to evaluate the compensating
and equivalent variations for an individual facing a price rise in the price of a
good. The preferences of the individual over the good and money are stated
below (note that the price of money is 1).
The individual has Perfect Substitute preferences over the good and money
with parameter a = 0.50. The individual has income 30 and faces a price
2.00 for the good. Suppose the price of the good rises by 0.10.
Question 12: What is the compensating variation?
0.20
0.30
0.10
0.00
Question 13: What is the equivalent variation?
0.40
0.20
0.00
0.30
Questions 14 and 15
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In the next two questions you will be asked to consider an individual, taking decisions
under conditions of risk, with Expected Utility preferences and utility function u(x) =
x^0.5 (that is, the utility of x is the square root of x). Suppose the individual is faced
with two lotteries P and Q as specified below. A lottery is denoted by (a,b;p,1-p) and
means that the outcome is a with probability p and b with probability 1-p.
The lotteries are: P = (25,16;0.25,0.75) Q = (1,36;0.25,0.75)
Question 14: Does the individual prefer P or Q?
P
Q
We cannot say.
The individual is indifferent
Question 15: What is the individual's certainty equivalent for P?
27.25
18.25
22.5625
18.0625
Questions 16 and 17
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In the next two questions you will be asked to consider a game played
simultaneously, and without communication between two players, 1 and 2, each of
whom can choose one of two options A and B. The payoffs to the two players are
given below, the first for Player 1 and then for Player 2. The order of the payoffs is
AA, AB, BA, BB where XY indicates the outcome when Player 1 plays X and Player 2
plays Y.
Player 1: 5, 1, 6, 8. Player 2: 10, 4, 8, 8.
Question 16: Specify ALL the Nash Equilibria in pure strategies.
There are not any
AB
BA
BA BB
Question 17: Specify ALL other outcomes (not a Nash Equilibrium) that Pareto dominate
any of these.
AA dominates BB
BB e AA dominate AB
BB dominates AA
There are none
Tips!
• Remember that you get 2 marks for a
correct answer and lose 1 mark for an
incorrect.
• DO NOT GUESS!
• Take coloured pencils and pens.
• Take a rubber.
• Do NOT apply MAGIC formulae.
• Good Luck!!