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12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse B) inverse, direct C) inverse, inverse D) direct, direct E) strong, weak 13. A leftward shift of a supply curve might be caused by: A) an improvement in the relevant technique of production. B) a decline in the prices of needed inputs (resources). C) an increase in consumer incomes. D) some firms leaving a market.

12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

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Page 1: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____.A) direct, inverse B) inverse, direct C) inverse, inverse D) direct, directE) strong, weak

13. A leftward shift of a supply curve might be caused by: A) an improvement in the relevant technique of production. B) a decline in the prices of needed inputs (resources). C) an increase in consumer incomes. D) some firms leaving a market.

Page 2: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

14. Which of the following statements is correct? A) If demand increases and supply decreases, equilibrium price will fall. B) If the demand and the supply both fall at the same time, quantity will be indeterminate C) If demand decreases and supply increases, equilibrium price will rise. D) If supply increases and demand decreases, equilibrium price will fall. E) If supply falls and demand remains constant, equilibrium price will fall.

Page 3: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

15. At price $20, there would be a SURPLUS of… A) 100 B) 150 C) 200 D) 50 E) 0

16. What would be the effect of a price floor at $60A) It would ineffective D) A shortage of 100 B) A shortage of 50 E) A surplus of 100C) Quantity demanded would increase

Page 4: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

17. Which of the following statements is correct? A) If demand increases and supply decreases, equilibrium price will fall. B) If the demand and the supply both fall at the same time, quantity will be indeterminate C) If demand decreases and supply increases, equilibrium price will rise. D) If supply increases and demand decreases, equilibrium price will fall. E) If supply falls and demand remains constant, equilibrium price will fall.

18. If Buyer’s Max=$300, Seller’s Min=$150, & Price=$350 thenA) consumer’s surplus is 50B) consumer’s surplus is 100C) producer’s surplus is 200D) producer’s surplus is 50E) there would be no exchange

Page 5: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Government Intervention

Basic Economic Concepts #6

Page 6: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Government Involvement

#1-Price Controls: Floors and Ceilings#2-Import Quotas#3-Subsidies#4-Excise Taxes

6

Page 7: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

#1-PRICE CONTROLSWho likes the idea of having a price ceiling on gas

so prices will never go over $1 per gallon?

7

Page 8: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Qo

$5

4

3

2

1

P

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 8

D

S

Shortage(Qd>Qs)

Maximum legal price a seller can charge for a product.Goal: Make affordable by keeping price from reaching Eq.

Gasoline

Does this policy help consumers?

Result: BLACK MARKETS Price Ceiling

Price Ceiling

To have an effect, a price ceiling must be

below equilibrium

Page 9: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Qo

$

4

3

2

1

P

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 9

D

SSurplus(Qd<Qs)

Minimum legal price a seller can sell a product.Goal: Keep price high by keeping price from falling to Eq.

Corn

Does this policy help

corn producers?

Price Floor

Price Floor

To have an effect, a price floor must be

above equilibrium

Page 10: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Are Price Controls Good or Bad?To be “efficient” a market must maximize consumers

and producers surplus

Q

P

D

S

Pc

Qe

CS

PS

10

Page 11: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Are Price Controls Good or Bad?To be “efficient” a market must maximize consumers and

producers surplus

Price FLOOR

Q

P

D

S

Pc

QeQfloor

DEADWEIGHT LOSS The Lost CS and PS.

INEFFICIENT!

CS

PS

11

Page 12: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Are Price Controls Good or Bad?To be “efficient” a market must maximize consumers and

producers surplus

Q

P

D

S

Pc

Qe

CS

PS

12

Page 13: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Are Price Controls Good or Bad?To be “efficient” a market must maximize consumers and

producers surplus

Price CEILING

Q

P

D

S

Pc

QeQceiling

DEADWEIGHT LOSS The Lost CS and PS.

INEFFICIENT!CS

PS

13

Page 14: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

#2 Import QuotasA quota is a limit on number of imports.

The government sets the maximum amount that can come in the country.

Purpose:•To protect domestic producers from a cheaper world price.•To prevent domestic unemployment

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Page 15: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

International Trade and QuotasIdentify the following:1. CS with no trade2. PS with no trade3. CS if we trade at world

price (PW)4. PS if we trade at world

price (PW)5. Amount we import at

world price (PW)6. If the government sets

a quota on imports of Q4 - Q2, what happens to CS and PS?

This graphs show the domestic supply and demand for grain.

The letters represent area.

HTLI

HIJKLMNRS

T

Q5-Q1

CS smallerPS bigger

Page 16: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

#3 SubsidiesThe government just gives producers money.The goal is for them to make more of the goods that the government thinks are important.

Ex:•Agriculture (to prevent famine)•Pharmaceutical Companies•Environmentally Safe Vehicles•FAFSA

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Page 17: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Result of Subsidies to Corn Producers

Qo

Price of Corn

Quantity of Corn 17

SSSubsidy

Price DownQuantity Up

Everyone Wins, Right?

Pe

P1

Qe Q1

D

Page 18: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

18

Page 19: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

#4 Excise TaxesExcise Tax = A per unit tax on producers

For every unit made, the producer must pay $NOT a Lump Sum (one time only)TaxThe goal is for them to make less of the goods that the government deems dangerous or unwanted.

Ex:•Cigarettes “sin tax”•Alcohol “sin tax”•Tariffs on imported goods•Environmentally Unsafe Products•Etc.

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Page 20: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Excise Taxes

Qo

$5

4

3

2

1

P

20

Supply Schedule

P Qs

$5 140

$4 120

$3 100

$2 80

$1 60 D

S

40 60 80 100 120 140

Government sets a $2 per unit tax on Cigarettes

Page 21: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Excise Taxes

Qo

$5

4

3

2

1

P

21

Supply Schedule

P Qs

$5 $7 140

$4 $6 120

$3 $5 100

$2 $4 80

$1 $3 60 D

S

40 60 80 100 120 140

Government sets a $2 per unit tax on Cigarettes

Page 22: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

Excise Taxes

Qo

$5

4

3

2

1

P

22

Supply Schedule

P Qs

$5 $7 140

$4 $6 120

$3 $5 100

$2 $4 80

$1 $3 60 D

S

40 60 80 100 120 140

Tax is the vertical distance between

supply curves

STax

Page 23: 12. The relationship between quantity supplied and price is _____ and the relationship between quantity demanded and price is _____. A) direct, inverse

FRQ #2