Showing posts with label elasticity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elasticity. Show all posts

Friday, September 8, 2023

2023 AP Micro FRQ Set 1 #3

 2023 AP Micro FRQ Set 1 #3


A) Calculate Hansel Hangout’s total fixed cost. Show your work.

 

Hansel is a profit maximizing firm, which means they produce where MC = MR.

 

We should know that ATC = AVC + AFC

 

Average Total Costs = Average Variable Costs + Average Fixed Costs

Or 

We could rearrange it and recognize that ATC – AVC = AFC

 

So, at 6 units of output/production the ATC = $21 & the AVC = $9

How to find the ATC & AVC? 

Go to the output of production (6 units) and go straight up.

We hit the AVC curve at $9 and if we keep going up, we hit the ATC at $21.

ATC = $21

AVC = $9

So, the AFC = $12

 

Now you are scratching your head and saying, “Charles how does that help me find TFC”?

 

You should know that to go from AFC to TFC, we take AFC and multiply it by the output.

 

Or to say it differently


AFC x Quantity = Total Fixed Cost 

ATC x Quantity/output = Total Cost

AVC x Quantity/output = Total Variable Cost

 

Recognize that Total Fixed Cost & Fixed Cost are the same thing. :0

 

AFC x Quantity = Total Fixed Cost 

Answer A) $12 x 6 units produced = TFC of $72

 

 

B) Identify the price and quantity for Hansel’s at Profit max.

 

I believe we already did it, 

 

Profit Maximization for Hansel’s Hangout for Good X is where MC = MR

Answer B) Price $14 Quantity $6

C) Calculate the economic profit at the quantity identified in part (b). Show your work.

 

Economic profit = Total Revenue – Total Costs

 

6 quantity/outputs/units sold x $14 = Total Revenue of $84

 

To find Total Costs we find average total costs x quantity produced

Or

ATC x Quantity = TC

 

The firm at profit max (MR=MC) produces 6 units 

and at 6 units the ATC is $21 (we found it earlier)

 

$21 x 6 = a TC of $126


Hansel isn’t doing very well.

Total Revenue = $84

Total Costs $126

 

Remember Profit = TR – TC

 

$84 - $126 = -$42

 

Answer C) Hansel has a Negative economic profit of $42

Or we could say Hansel has a loss of $42


D) As the market for Good X adjusts to the long-run equilibrium, what will happen to the price of Good X? Explain.


From the 2023 Cheat Sheet for Perfect Competition.


How do we know that firm is a perfectly competitive firm = The MRDARP curve is horizontal

 

The price is constant which is a characteristic of perfectly competitive firms.

 

Losses in an industry cause some firms to Exit/go broke and the supply of the Good X decreases/shifts left as those firms quit producing Good X.

 

Answer D) The price increases as supply shifts left.

 

E) Assume the cross-price elasticity of demand between Good X and Good C is positive. Given the change in the long-run price of Good X in part (d), will the quantity demanded of Good C increase, decrease, or remain the same? Explain.

 

You should know that if the cross-price elasticity is positive that means the two goods are substitutes.

 

Also, substitutes are positively related in price. 

 

Example: As the price of Coke increase people switch to Pepsi, increasing the demand for Pepsi.

Answer E) Increasing demand which will increase the quantity demanded for the good.










Saturday, May 9, 2020

ALL Elasticity FRQ's

ALL Elasticity FRQ's


2019 AP Microeconomics Exam



2016 AP Microeconomics Exam





2015 AP Microeconomics Exam



2014 AP Microeconomics Exam






2012 AP Microeconomics Exam



2011 AP Microeconomics Exam



2010B AP Microeconomics Exam




2009 AP Microeconomics Exam


2009B AP Microeconomics Exam




2008 AP Microeconomics Exam


2005 AP Microeconomics Exam




2004B AP Microeconomics Exam


















Saturday, September 16, 2017

Inelastic Demand

Inelastic Demand
Elasticity is all about the changes.
Elasticity Cheat Sheet here

**You must know the determinants.

Determinants of Inelastic Demand? 

Low Price 
The price of my favourite candy bar increased by 10%, I didn't notice.
  (My demand for my favourite candy bar is inelastic as a 10% price increase is such a low amount I don't notice it or let it change my preference)


Necessity 
The price of black beans increased by 20% and I don't care. 
(I love black beans and consider them a necessity in my kitchen. My demand for Shitto is inelastic)
I've eaten a lot of Shitto in my life.
I'm a Shitto magnet
Ok, that's enough.

Short (Time) Horizon
Sometimes you don't have the capacity to be shopping around for the lowest price.
(My demand for a toilet is inelastic when I have to go bad)

Addictive 
If a good is addictive then your desire for that good doesn't diminish very much if the price increases.
Therefore your demand for the good is inelastic.

Low Number of Substitutes
Often if something is unique or if the choices are limited then your demand will be inelastic.



**Know that the Inelastic Demand curve is drawn very steeply.
When Supply decreases the price for Petrol increases by a larger amount that the Quantity Demand,
Why?
There is no close substitute for Petrol, therefore the Demand is Inelastic
** Know that any and every demand curve has an elastic section and an inelastic section.
Recognise, that the inelastic section of the curve is at the lower prices, this often causes confusion but it shouldn't,,,
at low prices a 10% change in the price does' t really affect the amount we buy,, or our quantity demand.

**Know that Inelastic Demand means that the percentage change in quantity demand is less than the percentage price change. 
We can see that with a price increase, quantity demand has changed less
When you are demand inelastic you just don't react as much to a price change

** Know Perfectly Inelastic demand is that no matter the Price change (great or small) the same amount of a good will be bought.
** Understand that the PED of a perfectly inelastic curve is zero and that the PED for a relatively Inelastic demand is between zero and 1.


Perfectly Inelastic PED is zero (0) 
This makes sense in that with a price change there is a (0) % change in the quantity demanded

Relatively Inelastic Demand is a number between zero (0) and 1
Inelastic Demand = 0 < PED < 1
This makes sense as the % change in quantity demand is less than the % change in price