Econ Word Scramble
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| Question | Answer |
| Welfare economics is the study of the well-being of less fortunate people. | False |
| With respect to welfare economics, the equilibrium price of a product is considered to be the best price because it maximizes total revenue to firms and total utility to buyers. | False |
| Willingness to pay measures the amount a buyer is willing to pay for a good minus the amount the buyer actually pays for it. | False |
| Consumer surplus is a buyer’s willingness to pay minus the price. | True |
| A consumer’s willingness to pay measures the cost of a good to the buyer | False |
| . If a consumer is willing and able to pay $20.00 for a particular good but only has to pay $14.00, the consumer surplus is $6.00. | True |
| . Belva is willing to pay $65.00 for a pair of shoes for a formal dance. She finds a pair at her favorite outlet shoe store for $48.00. Belva’s consumer surplus is $17. | True |
| Shannon buys a new CD player for her car for $135. She receives consumer surplus of $25 on her purchase. Her willingness to pay is $25. | False |
| Janine would be willing to pay $50 to see Les Misérables, but buys a ticket for only $30. Janine values the performance at $20. | False |
| Amy buys a new dog for $150. She receives consumer surplus of $100 on her purchase. Her willingness to pay is $50. | False |
| If the price a consumer pays for a product is equal to a consumer’s willingness to pay, then the consumer surplus of that purchase would be zero. | True |
| Suppose there is an early freeze in California that ruins the lemon crop. Consumer surplus in the market for lemons decreases | True |
| If you pay a price exactly equal to your willingness to pay, then your consumer surplus is negative. | False |
| A demand curve measures a buyer’s willingness to pay. | True |
| Consumer surplus equals the Value to buyers – Amount paid by buyers. | True |
| The area below a demand curve and above the price measures producer surplus. | False |
| If the price of a good increases, consumer surplus decreases. | True |
| When technology improves in the ice cream industry, consumer surplus will increase. | True |
| In most markets, consumer surplus reflects economic well-being. | True |
| Out-of-pocket expenses plus the value of the seller’s own resources used in production are considered to be the seller’s total revenue. | False |
| Cost is a measure of the seller’s willingness to sell. | True |
| Cost refers to a seller’s producer surplus. | False |
| A supply curve can be used to measure producer surplus because it reflects the actions of sellers. | False |
| . A seller would be willing to sell a product ONLY IF the price received is less than the cost of production. | False |
| Suppose the demand for nachos increases. Producer surplus in the market for nachos will increase. | True |
| If demand decreases, the price of a product, as well as producer surplus, increases. | False |
| The Surgeon General announces that eating chocolate increases tooth decay. As a result, the equilibrium market price of chocolate increases, and producer surplus increases. | False |
| Suppose consumer income increases. If grass seed is a normal good, the equilibrium price of grass seed will decrease, and producer surplus in the industry will decrease. | False |
| Producer surplus equals Value to buyers – Amount paid by buyers. | False |
| Producer surplus is the area under the supply curve to the left of the amount sold. | False |
| The marginal seller is the seller who cannot compete with the other sellers in the market. | False |
| Producer surplus measures the well-being of sellers. | True |
| Denea produces cookies. Her production cost is $3 per dozen. She sells the cookies for $8 per dozen. Her producer surplus is $3 per dozen. | False |
| Donald produces nails at a cost of $200 per ton. If he sells the nails for $500 per ton, his producer surplus is $200 per ton. | False |
| If Roberta sells a shirt for $30, and her producer surplus from the sale is $21, her cost must have been $51. | False |
| . At Nick’s Bakery, the cost to make his homemade chocolate cake is $3 per cake. He sells three and receives a total of $21 worth of producer surplus. Nick must be selling his cakes for $2 each. | False |
| We can say that the allocation of resources is efficient if producer surplus is maximized. | False |
| total surplus = value to sellers – costs of sellers is NOT correct. | True |
| Total surplus in a market is the total costs to sellers of providing the goods less the total value to buyers of the goods. | False |
| In a market, total surplus is equal to producer surplus plus consumer surplus. | True |
| Total surplus in a market is represented by the total area under the demand curve and above the price. | False |
| At the equilibrium price, the good will be purchased by those buyers who value the good more than price. | True |
| Total surplus in a market equals Value to buyers – Amount paid by buyers. | False |
| Total surplus in a market equals Consumer surplus + Producer surplus. | True |
| . An allocation of resources is said to be inefficient if a good is not being produced by the sellers with the lowest cost. | True |
| When economists say that markets are efficient, they are assuming that markets are perfectly competitive. | True |
| Efficiency occurs when total surplus is maximized. | True |
| Inefficiency exists in any economy when a good is not being consumed by buyers who value it most highly | True |
| The “invisible hand” refers to the marketplace guiding the self-interests of market participants into promoting general economic well-being. | True |
| Externalities are side effects passed on to a party other than the buyers and sellers in the market. | True |
| When markets fail, public policy can do nothing to improve the situation. | False |
| If a market is allowed to move freely to its equilibrium price and quantity, then an increase in supply will increase consumer surplus. | True |
| To analyze economic wellbeing in an economy it is necessary to use demand and supply | False |
| When a tax is levied on a good only the quantity of the good sold will change. | False |
| A tax on a good raises the price buyers pay and lowers the price sellers receive. | True |
| When a good is taxed both buyers and sellers are worse off. | True |
| A tax placed on a product causes the price the buyer pays and the price the seller receives to be higher. | False |
| Economic analysis uses consumer and producer surplus to judge the effect of taxes on economic welfare | True |
| A tax levied on the supplier of a product shifts the supply curve upward (or to the left). | True |
| A tax levied on the buyers of a product shifts the supply curve upward (or to the left). | False |
| If a tax is imposed on a market with elastic demand and inelastic supply, buyers will bear most of the burden of the tax. | False |
| Suppose a tax is imposed on the buyers of a product. The burden of the tax will fall entirely on the buyers. | False |
| A tax imposed on a market with an inelastic demand and an elastic supply will cause sellers to pay the majority of the tax. | False |
| When a tax is placed on the buyers of orange juice, the size of the orange juice market is reduced. | True |
| A tax imposed on gasoline, will have buyers and sellers sharing the burden of the tax. | True |
| The benefit received by buyers in the market is measured by the demand curve. | False |
| The benefit received by the government from a tax is measured by deadweight loss. | False |
| Total tax revenue received by government can be expressed as T/Q. | False |
| The benefit received by sellers in a market is measured by the supply curve. | False |
| The benefit from a tax is measured by the benefit received by those people who gain from government’s expenditure of the tax revenue. | True |
| Deadweight loss measures the loss in a market to buyers and sellers that is not offset by an increase in government revenue. | True |
| The loss in total surplus resulting from a tax is called a deficit. | False |
| Deadweight loss is the reduction in total surplus that results from a tax. | True |
| A tax has a deadweight loss because it induces the government to spend more. | False |
| Total surplus with a tax is equal to consumer surplus and producer surplus. | False |
| Assume that the supply of gasoline is relatively inelastic and the supply of wheat is relatively elastic. A tax levied on wheat will cause the loss of producer surplus to be relatively large. | True |
| As the size of a tax increases the deadweight loss from the tax declines | False |
| If the size of a tax increases, tax revenue will increase. | False |
| The Laffer curve relates income tax rates to total income taxes collected. | False |
| As the tax rate rises, tax revenue rises for a while, but eventually begins to fall; deadweight loss continually rises, this is true for most markets | True |
| For the most part, all governments, federal, state, and local, rely on taxes to raise revenue for public purposes. | True |
| The term tax incidence refers to the Boston Tea Party | False |
| The initial effect of a tax on the buyers of a good is on the supply of that good. | False |
| If buyers are required to pay a $0.10 tax per bag on Hershey’s kisses, the demand for kisses will shift up by $0.10 per bag | False |
| A tax on the buyers of popcorn increases the size of the popcorn market. | False |
| For the most part, buyers and sellers share the burden of the tax. | True |
| When a tax is placed on the buyers of milk, the size of the milk market is reduced. | True |
| If a tax is levied on the seller of a product the demand curve will not change. | True |
| A tax placed on the seller of a product will raise equilibrium price and lower equilibrium quantity. | True |
| A tax placed on the seller of a good raises the price buyers pay and lowers the price sellers receive. | True |
| When a tax is placed on the sellers of a product the size of the market is reduced | True |
| A tax on the sellers of cell phones will reduce the size of the cell phone market. | True |
| A tax placed on the sellers of blueberries increases costs, lowers profit and shifts supply to the left (upward). | True |
| In the end, tax incidence depends on the legislated burden. | False |
| If a tax is imposed on a market with inelastic demand and elastic supply, buyers will bear most of the burden of the tax. | True |
| Buyers of a product will pay the majority of a tax placed on a product when supply is more elastic than demand. | True |
| If a tax is imposed on a market with elastic demand and inelastic supply, buyers will bear most of the burden of the tax. | False |
| For the most part, a tax burden falls most heavily on the side of the market that is more inelastic. | True |
| The burden of a tax placed on a product depends on the supply and demand of that product. | True |
| Suppose that a tax is placed on DVDs. If the seller ends up paying the majority of the tax we know that the demand curve is more inelastic than the supply curve | False |
| Suppose that a tax is placed on books. If the buyer pays the majority of the tax we know that the supply curve is more inelastic than the demand curve | False |
| When analyzing the economic effects of government policies, supply and demand are useful tools of analysis. | True |
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