front 1 Anything that prevents new firms from competing on an equal basis
with existing firms in an industry is called a barrier to entry. | back 1 a. True |
front 2 A monopolist is | back 2 e.a single seller of a product with no close substitutes |
front 3 Which of the following is true of monopoly? | back 3 c.There are no close substitutes for the product being produced. |
front 4 Which of the following could be true of perfect competition but not
of monopoly? | back 4 e.There are no barriers to entry. |
front 5 Innovation is the process of turning an invention into a marketable product. | back 5 a. True |
front 6 Which of the following is true? | back 6 d.Patents give a temporary exclusive right to produce a new good. |
front 7 U.S. patent laws establish property rights for inventors of new
products | back 7 e.for 20 years |
front 8 Patent laws promote technical progress in all of the following ways
except one. Which is the exception? | back 8 a.They allow other firms to copy successful products as soon as they are marketed. |
front 9 Patent laws | back 9 c.increase incentive to innovate by restricting entry into a market |
front 10 Patents stimulate investment | back 10 a.by giving inventors an incentive to incur up-front costs of developing new products |
front 11 Which of the following prevents potential competitors from entering a
monopolist's market? | back 11 a.legal restrictions |
front 12 Willie Stand obtains a patent on his new invention, the bipod. After
twenty years, | back 12 d.Willie will eventually earn no more than a normal profit |
front 13 A natural monopoly is based on economies of scale. | back 13 a. True |
front 14 In the monopoly market structure, new firms | back 14 a.cannot profitably enter the industry, even in the long run |
front 15 Which of the following is not considered a barrier to
entry? | back 15 d.diseconomies of scale |
front 16 Which of the following describes the market structure of
monopoly? | back 16 e.a single firm producing all of the output for the industry |
front 17 Natural monopolies form when | back 17 e.long-run average cost declines as a firm expands output |
front 18 Which of the following could not bar entry into an
industry? | back 18 b.diseconomies of scale |
front 19 Which of the following would probably not be considered a natural
monopoly? | back 19 e.the automobile industry |
front 20 A natural monopoly results when a firm has | back 20 d.decreasing average costs over the range of market demand |
front 21 If a firm is a natural monopoly, its | back 21 a.long-run average cost declines over the full range of market demand |
front 22 DeBeers is a natural monopoly in the world's diamond trade. | back 22 b. False |
front 23 De Beers Consolidated Mines has monopoly power | back 23 c.through its control of an essential resource |
front 24 Jewelers are willing to hold large inventories of
diamonds | back 24 c.because, given De Beers' control of the market, they are confident that the price of diamonds will not plummet rapidly |
front 25 One important source of challenge to De Beers' control of the diamond
market is | back 25 a.the additional market supply from Russia, Australia, and Canada |
front 26 A monopolist has complete control over both price and quantity of output. | back 26 b. False |
front 27 Maximizing total revenue is the same as maximizing profit. | back 27 b. False |
front 28 A price searcher is any firm that has no control over price and must
accept the market price as given. | back 28 b. False |
front 29 The demand curve a monopolist uses in making an output decision
is | back 29 d.the same as the market demand curve |
front 30 The demand curve a monopolist faces | back 30 b.is the market demand curve |
front 31 The demand curve faced by a firm with a patent on a marketable
product | back 31 d.slopes downward |
front 32 A monopolist's demand curve is | back 32 c.identical to the market demand curve |
front 33 For a monopolist, P < MR at all quantities. | back 33 b. False |
front 34 In order to sell an additional unit of its product, a monopolist must
decrease price on all units. | back 34 a. True |
front 35 Average revenue equals the change in total revenue divided by the
change in the quantity of output produced. | back 35 b. false |
front 36 Average revenue, demand, and price are all depicted by the same curve
for a monopoly. | back 36 a. True |
front 37 A profit-maximizing monopolist will always operate where demand is
unit elastic. | back 37 b. False |
front 38 Which of the following is true of marginal revenue for a monopolist
that charges a single price? | back 38 b. |
front 39 If a monopolist must lower the price on all units in order to sell an
additional unit, | back 39 d.price will always be greater than marginal revenue |
front 40 For a monopolist, marginal revenue is | back 40 c.less than price |
front 41 ![]() In Exhibit 9-1, total revenue from selling 5 units is | back 41 c.$100 |
front 42 ![]() In Exhibit 9-1, the marginal revenue of the third unit is | back 42 a.$20 |
front 43 ![]() In Exhibit 9-1, the marginal revenue of the sixth unit is | back 43 e.-$40 |
front 44 For a monopolist, | back 44 e. P = AR > MR |
front 45 ![]() Between which quantities in Exhibit 9-2 is demand unit
elastic? | back 45 c. 3 and 4 |
front 46 ![]() In Exhibit 9-2, the marginal revenue of the fourth unit is | back 46 e.$0 |
front 47 ![]() In Exhibit 9-2, the average revenue of the fourth unit is | back 47 b.$3 |
front 48 ![]() The price elasticity of demand between P = $3 and P = $2 in Exhibit
9-2 is | back 48 c. 5/9 |
front 49 ![]() From the following demand schedule for a monopolist, what is the marginal revenue associated with the sale of the fourth unit? a. | back 49 b. $30 |
front 50 As a monopolist increases the quantity of output produced, what
happens to price (P) and marginal revenue (MR)? | back 50 e.both P and MR decrease, but MR falls faster than P |
front 51 For a monopolist, as output expands, price and marginal revenue
become more divergent (i.e., are farther apart). | back 51 a. True |
front 52 A monopolist's marginal revenue curve is flatter than its demand curve. | back 52 b. False |
front 53 On a graph, to determine the price a profit-maximizing monopolist
would charge, find the quantity at which MC and MR intersect and read
up to the demand curve. | back 53 a. True |
front 54 A monopolist maximizes total revenue at the quantity where marginal
revenue equals zero. | back 54 a. True |
front 55 The demand curve facing a monopolist is perfectly elastic. | back 55 b. False |
front 56 If all of a monopolist's costs are fixed costs, it will produce where
demand is unit elastic. | back 56 a. True |
front 57 The demand curve facing a single-price monopolist | back 57 a.is the same as its average revenue curve |
front 58 The demand curve facing a monopolist | back 58 c.lies above its marginal revenue curve |
front 59 For a monopolist, | back 59 e.both marginal revenue and price fall as quantity increases, but marginal revenue falls faster |
front 60 Suppose that a monopolist must choose between two points on its
demand curve; it can sell 100 units for $3 each, or it can sell 160
units for $2 each. Which of the following is true? | back 60 a.The monopolist is facing an elastic demand. |
front 61 Suppose that a monopolist must choose between two points on its
demand curve: it can sell 100 units for $3 each, or it can sell 140
units for $2 each. Which of the following is true? | back 61 c. The monopolist is facing inelastic demand. |
front 62 Suppose that a monopolist must choose between two points on its
demand curve: it can sell 100 units for $3 each, or it can sell 150
units for $2 each. Which of the following is true? | back 62 b.The monopolist is facing unit elastic demand. |
front 63 For a monopolist, if marginal revenue is $40, total revenue is | back 63 a.increasing |
front 64 What is the relationship between price elasticity of demand and the
monopolist's revenue? | back 64 c.marginal revenue is negative where demand is inelastic. |
front 65 Suppose it costs Minnie's Mini-Golf (a monopolist) not a penny more
to let another person on the course. If Minnie's faces a linear
(downward-sloping) market demand curve, it will maximize profit by
choosing the point on the demand curve at which | back 65 b.price elasticity is unit elastic |
front 66 A profit-maximizing monopolist | back 66 e. never produces on the inelastic portion of the demand curve because marginal revenue is negative there |
front 67 ![]() What is the revenue-maximizing output for the monopolist represented
in Exhibit 9-4, assuming it does not price
discriminate? | back 67 e. 5 units |
front 68 ![]() What is the profit-maximizing or loss-minimizing output for the
monopolist represented in Exhibit 9-4, assuming it does not price
discriminate? | back 68 c. 3 units |
front 69 A monopolist's demand curve | back 69 b.lies above its marginal revenue curve |
front 70 A profit-maximizing monopolist never produces along the __________
portion of the demand curve because marginal revenue is __________
there. | back 70 c. inelastic; negative |
front 71 If a firm's demand curve slopes downward, the
firm's | back 71 b. marginal revenue will generally be less than price |
front 72 A firm facing a downward-sloping demand curve sells 50 units of
output at $10 each. The firm's marginal revenue
is | back 72 d. less than $10 |
front 73 Negative marginal revenue means that | back 73 e. total revenue is decreasing as output increases |
front 74 If a monopolist is producing a rate of output at which market demand
is inelastic, | back 74 d. reducing output would increase total revenue and reduce total cost |
front 75 Monopolists always earn positive short-run economic profit. | back 75 b. False |
front 76 A profit-maximizing monopoly will always produce at the minimum point
of its average total cost (ATC) curve. | back 76 b. False |
front 77 For a nondiscriminating monopolist, describe the relationship between
market price (P), average revenue (AR), and marginal revenue
(MR). | back 77 c. P = AR > MR |
front 78 Which of the following does a monopoly control, that a perfectly
competitive firm does not control? | back 78 c. what price to charge |
front 79 A monopolist maximizes profit at the quantity where its total revenue
curve equals total cost. | back 79 b. False |
front 80 A monopolist maximizes profit at the quantity where the slope of its
total revenue curve equals the slope of its total cost curve. | back 80 a. True |
front 81 Which of the following is not true of monopolists? | back 81 c. Monopolists can charge any price they want and make a profit. |
front 82 Suppose a single firm supplies all the ceramic windlasses in the U.S.
The demand curve that firm faces is | back 82 e. |
front 83 Which of the following is true at the profit-maximizing quantity for
both a perfectly competitive firm and a monopoly? | back 83 c. |
front 84 A monopolist | back 84 d. |
front 85 A monopolist earning short-run economic profit determines that at its
present level of output, marginal revenue is $23 and marginal cost is
$30. Which of the following should the firm do to increase
profit? | back 85 a. |
front 86 For a monopolist that does not price discriminate, economic profit is
maximized in the short run at a price of $140. Marginal revenue at
that output level is | back 86 c. less than $140 |
front 87 ![]() What is the profit-maximizing price for the monopolist in Exhibit 9-6? | back 87 d. $9 |
front 88 ![]() What is the maximum profit the monopolist in Exhibit 9-6 can earn? | back 88 d. $44.20 |
front 89 Irving R. Associates is granted a patent for a new product for which
there are no close substitutes. Which of the following must be true at
the profit-maximizing quantity? | back 89 c. |
front 90 A monopolist faces an upward-sloping marginal cost curve. Its
profit-maximizing quantity will be | back 90 b. |
front 91 One likely result of monopoly power is | back 91 d. |
front 92 Which of following is true of monopoly and not of perfect
competition? | back 92 b. |
front 93 ![]() Consider Exhibit 9-7. What is the profit-maximizing output for a
monopolist that does not price discriminate? | back 93 c. |
front 94 ![]() In Exhibit 9-7, what is the profit-maximizing price for a monopolist
that does not price discriminate? | back 94 c. $28 |
front 95 ![]() In Exhibit 9-7, how much profit is the monopoly earning at the
profit-maximizing quantity? | back 95 d. |
front 96 At the profit-maximizing quantity in Exhibit 9-8, what is the level
of profit? | back 96 b. $30 |
front 97 If marginal cost is positive, which of the following is
true? | back 97 c. |
front 98 Eli Whitney III receives a patent for the rayon gin, a product for
which there are no close substitutes. Eli will maximize his profit
when | back 98 b. |
front 99 Suppose a monopolist cannot price discriminate. To maximize profit,
it will | back 99 c. never produce in the inelastic range of its demand curve |
front 100 Which of the following is not true of a pure
monopoly? | back 100 d. It is a price taker |
front 101 A profit-maximizing monopolist that produces in the short run
will | back 101 b. increase output as long as the marginal revenue exceeds the marginal cost of producing that unit |
front 102 In the short run, how will a profit-maximizing monopolist react if
its marginal cost suddenly increases? It will | back 102 b. |
front 103 Suppose Arf n' Barf restaurant has a monopoly on restaurant food in a
certain small town. Their rent, which is one of several fixed costs
they pay whether they sell food or not, has gone up. In the short run,
the Arf n' Barf should | back 103 b. pay the higher rent and leave menu prices unchanged |
front 104 Gilligan runs the only dry-cleaning business on a desert isle. If the
cost of cleaning fluid falls, he can increase profit by | back 104 d. lowering price |
front 105 You are hired as a production analyst at Monopoly-R-Us and you
estimate that, at current output, demand is inelastic and marginal
cost is positive. You advise your superiors that they can increase
profit by | back 105 b. |
front 106 For a monopolist that produces in the short run and does not price
discriminate, price always has to be | back 106 c. greater than marginal cost at the profit-maximizing quantity |
front 107 Suppose the only professional hockey team within 500 miles is the
Salt Lake City Slappers team. If the State of Utah imposes a profits
tax on sports teams, the Slappers will | back 107 c. maintain ticket prices and suffer a loss in profits |
front 108 Suppose Bank-in-the-Box is a monopolist in its market area. If the
market wage rate of bank tellers rises, the bank
will | back 108 c. |
front 109 Suppose that at an output of 1,000 units, a monopolist has marginal
cost of $40, marginal revenue of $30, average variable cost of $30,
and average total cost of $50. In order to maximize profit or minimize
loss in the short run, the firm should | back 109 c. |
front 110 A profit-maximizing monopolist produces an output level at
which | back 110 d. marginal revenue equals marginal cost |
front 111 A nondiscriminating monopolist earning positive short-run economic
profit determines that its current marginal cost is $15 and its
current marginal revenue is $20. To maximize profit, a firm
should | back 111 d. |
front 112 If the marginal cost curve shifts upward, a profit-maximizing,
nondiscriminating monopolist is likely to respond in the short run
by | back 112 b. raising price and decreasing output |
front 113 A monopolist's supply curve is the portion of its marginal cost curve
above average variable cost. | back 113 b. False |
front 114 Assuming a constant cost industry, consumer surplus would be greater
under monopoly than if the industry were perfectly
competitive. | back 114 b. False |
front 115 When a monopolist practices perfect price
discrimination, | back 115 a. consumers receive no consumer surplus |
front 116 Under perfect price discrimination, | back 116 d. equilibrium quantity is the same but consumer surplus is less than under perfect competition |
front 117 If a monopolist engages in perfect price
discrimination, | back 117 b. the demand curve also becomes the marginal revenue curve |
front 118 Which of the following is true of perfect price discrimination
compared to charging a single price? | back 118 a. Output is greater. |
front 119 Which of the following is true of perfect price
discrimination? | back 119 d. Consumer surplus is zero. |
front 120 A monopolist that engages in perfect price discrimination | back 120 d. charges a different price for every unit sold |
front 121 Which of the following is a major criticism of a monopoly as a cause
of allocative inefficiency? | back 121 a. A monopolist fails to expand output to the level where the consumers' evaluation of an additional unit is just equal to its opportunity cost |
front 122 A perfectly discriminating monopolist converts every dollar of
producer surplus into economic profit. | back 122 b. false |
front 123 With perfect price discrimination, each consumer is charged the
marginal value of each unit consumed. | back 123 a. True |
front 124 With perfect price discrimination, the firm faces a constant marginal revenue. a. True | back 124 b. false |
front 125 Suppose that a price-discriminating monopolist divides its market
into two segments. The firm will charge the lower price in the market
segment where consumers | back 125 b. have relatively more elastic demand |
front 126 Suppose that a price-discriminating monopolist divides its market
into two segments. In each market segment, price is determined by
finding the level of output where that market's | back 126 d. |
front 127 Suppose that a price-discriminating monopolist divides its market
into two segments. If the firm sells its product for a price of $42 in
the market segment where demand is relatively less elastic, the price
in the market segment whose customers' demand is more elastic will
be | back 127 c. less than $42 |
front 128 Price-discriminating, profit-maximizing monopolists charge higher
prices to buyers who have more elastic demand curves. | back 128 b. false |
front 129 Which of the following is not a condition required for a monopolist
to price discriminate? | back 129 b. the firm must exhibit strong economies of scale |
front 130 Price discrimination occurs when a monopolist
charges | back 130 d. different prices to different groups of buyers for reasons unrelated to the cost of providing the commodity to the buyer |
front 131 Which of the following would not be considered price
discrimination? | back 131 e. charging more for BMWs than for Chevrolets |
front 132 Which of the following would not be considered price
discrimination? | back 132 c. renting recently released videos at a higher price than the old classic videos |
front 133 Which of the following is not necessary for price discrimination to
occur? | back 133 e. economies of scale exist |
front 134 For which of the following products would price discrimination be
most difficult? | back 134 d. beer |
front 135 For which of the following products would price discrimination be
easiest? | back 135 d. haircuts |
front 136 A major fruit juice manufacturer failed in its attempt to engage in
price discrimination between students and all other consumers. What is
a possible explanation for this failure? | back 136 a. There was nothing to prevent the students from reselling the fruit juice to other consumers. |
front 137 Why would we be likely to observe dentists engaging in price
discrimination? | back 137 d. It is nearly impossible to resell the services of a dentist. |
front 138 Which of the following is not necessary in order for a firm to engage
in price discrimination? | back 138 a. The producer must face an inelastic demand curve. |
front 139 Price discrimination will occur whenever a firm faces a
downward-sloping demand curve. | back 139 b. False |
front 140 Which of the following would not be considered price
discrimination? | back 140 d. The price of a brand-name prescription drug is higher than the price of a generic brand. |
front 141 A monopolist price discriminates by | back 141 b. charging different buyers different prices for the same product |
front 142 The practice of charging different prices to different consumers of
the same product is called | back 142 c. price discrimination |
front 143 Firms price discriminate because, by doing so, they obtain a higher
profit than by charging a single price. | back 143 a. true |
front 144 Rent-seeking activities are socially wasteful because they use scarce
resources but do not add to society's output. | back 144 a. true |
front 145 Total deadweight loss in society is reduced through rent seeking by monopolists. | back 145 b. false |
front 146 The welfare loss of monopoly is also called | back 146 b. deadweight loss |
front 147 If a perfectly competitive industry is monopolized, consumer
surplus | back 147 a. can be expected to decrease |
front 148 Compared to a perfectly competitive market, a monopoly tends to
produce | back 148 c. less output and charge a higher price |
front 149 A profit-maximizing monopolist produces an output level that is
allocatively inefficient because | back 149 a. price is greater than marginal cost |
front 150 Compared to the productive efficiency of a perfectly competitive
firm, a monopolist tends to be | back 150 c. inefficient |
front 151 Empirical estimates indicate that the annual welfare cost of monopoly
in the United States | back 151 a. ranges from less than 1 percent to 5 percent of national income |
front 152 For a nondiscriminating monopolist, which of the following is
false? | back 152 b. The monopolist's marginal revenue curve is the same as its demand curve. |
front 153 Perfectly competitive firms and monopolist firms both maximize profit
where | back 153 d. marginal cost equals marginal revenue |
front 154 Unlike firms in a perfectly competitive industry, monopolists have
control over | back 154 a. the price they charge for the product |
front 155 Nondiscriminating monopoly is similar to perfect competition in
that | back 155 e. price equals average revenue for both |
front 156 Relative to a perfectly competitive market, as long as the monopolist
does not benefit from substantial economies of
scale, | back 156 d. quantity is lower and price is higher under monopoly |
front 157 If the government breaks up a constant-cost, nondiscriminating
monopoly into a perfectly competitive industry, what would we expect
with regard to output and price? | back 157 b. Output will increase and price will decrease. |
front 158 Which of the following conditions would distinguish a competitive
firm from a monopolist? | back 158 b. The slope of the demand curve facing the firm. |
front 159 When compared to firms in perfect competition, monopolists tend to
charge __________ prices and offer __________ quantities of
output. | back 159 b. higher; lower |
front 160 An important difference between a perfectly competitive firm and a
monopolist is that | back 160 d. the perfectly competitive firm faces a horizontal demand curve and the monopolist faces a downward-sloping demand curve |
front 161 One of the ways that a perfectly competitive firm and a
nondiscriminating monopolist are different is that | back 161 c. P = MR for a perfectly competitive firm but not for a monopolist |
front 162 What is true at the profit-maximizing quantity for a
nondiscriminating monopolist but not true of a perfectly competitive
firm? | back 162 b. Price is greater than marginal cost. |
front 163 What is true at the profit-maximizing quantity for a perfectly
competitive firm but not for a nondiscriminating
monopoly? | back 163 a. Price equals marginal cost. |
front 164 In the long run, which of the following is not a problem for a
monopolist earning economic profit? | back 164 e. all profit will gradually be converted to consumer surplus |
front 165 Firms can earn economic profits even in the long run
if | back 165 c. there are significant barriers to entry |
front 166 Unlike perfectly competitive firms, monopolists can | back 166 c. earn long-run economic profits |
front 167 Which of the following statements is true of a
monopolist? | back 167 c. The firm might earn a profit in the long run. |
front 168 Sam Edison obtains a patent on his new invention: trinoculars. In the
long run, | back 168 b. he may suffer an economic loss and stop producing |
front 169 Which of the following is true in both perfect competition and
monopoly? | back 169 d. Firms go out of business in the long run if total revenue cannot cover total cost. |
front 170 The main reason a monopolist can earn long-run economic profit,
whereas a perfectly competitive firm cannot, is
that | back 170 e. there are no barriers to entry in perfect competition |
front 171 Which of the following would not bar entry into a
market? | back 171 b. the necessity of taking risks when starting a firm |
front 172 Barriers to entry | back 172 c. may allow monopolies to earn profit in the long run |
front 173 Monopolists can earn positive economic profits in the long run
because they are more productively efficient than perfectly
competitive firms. | back 173 b. false |
front 174 Which of the following falsely describes a nondiscriminating
monopolist at profit maximization? | back 174 b. Economic profit is always positive. |
front 175 For a monopolist, there is no supply curve because | back 175 e. there is no unique relationship between price and quantity supplied |
front 176 The supply curve for a monopolist | back 176 e. does not exist |
front 177 Eli Whitney III receives a patent for the rayon gin, a product for
which there are no close substitutes. Eli will maximize his profit
when | back 177 b. MR = MC |
front 178 Suppose a monopolist cannot price discriminate. To maximize profit,
it will | back 178 c. never produce in the inelastic range of its demand curve |
front 179 Which of the following is not true of a pure
monopoly? | back 179 d. It is a price taker |
front 180 A profit-maximizing monopolist that produces in the short run
will | back 180 b. increase output as long as the marginal revenue exceeds the marginal cost of producing that unit |
front 181 In the short run, how will a profit-maximizing monopolist react if
its marginal cost suddenly increases? It will | back 181 b. restrict output to extract a higher price from customers |
front 182 Suppose Arf n' Barf restaurant has a monopoly on restaurant food in a
certain small town. Their rent, which is one of several fixed costs
they pay whether they sell food or not, has gone up. In the short run,
the Arf n' Barf should | back 182 b. pay the higher rent and leave menu prices unchanged |
front 183 Gilligan runs the only dry-cleaning business on a desert isle. If the
cost of cleaning fluid falls, he can increase profit
by | back 183 d. lowering price |
front 184 You are hired as a production analyst at Monopoly-R-Us and you
estimate that, at current output, demand is inelastic and marginal
cost is positive. You advise your superiors that they can increase
profit by | back 184 b. raising price into the elastic range |
front 185 For a monopolist that produces in the short run and does not price
discriminate, price always has to be | back 185 c. greater than marginal cost at the profit-maximizing quantity |
front 186 Suppose the only professional hockey team within 500 miles is the
Salt Lake City Slappers team. If the State of Utah imposes a profits
tax on sports teams, the Slappers will | back 186 c. |
front 187 Suppose Bank-in-the-Box is a monopolist in its market area. If the
market wage rate of bank tellers rises, the bank
will | back 187 c. raise price but earn less profit |
front 188 Suppose that at an output of 1,000 units, a monopolist has marginal
cost of $40, marginal revenue of $30, average variable cost of $30,
and average total cost of $50. In order to maximize profit or minimize
loss in the short run, the firm should | back 188 c. produce fewer than 1,000 units but still operate |
front 189 A profit-maximizing monopolist produces an output level at
which | back 189 d. |
front 190 A nondiscriminating monopolist earning positive short-run economic
profit determines that its current marginal cost is $15 and its
current marginal revenue is $20. To maximize profit, a firm
should | back 190 d. reduce price and increase output |
front 191 If the marginal cost curve shifts upward, a profit-maximizing,
nondiscriminating monopolist is likely to respond in the short run
by | back 191 b. raising price and decreasing output |
front 192 Adam Matsumi is an attorney who can charge legal fees above the
competitive level because entry of new competitors is made more
difficult by the need to hold a(n) | back 192 a. state license |
front 193 Which of the following is not an example of De Beers trying to
increase consumer demand? | back 193 c. informing potential customers about how diamonds lose monetary value over time |
front 194 Consumer concern about “blood diamonds” or “conflict diamonds” may
have caused a drop in De Beers sales. | back 194 a. True |
front 195 Which of the following is an example of a local
monopoly? | back 195 a. a restaurant at a rural crossroads |
front 196 Because some monopolies could still earn an economic profit even if
the firm is inefficient, corporate executives might waste resources by
indulging in | back 196 e. All of the answers are correct. |
front 197 Business-class airline tickets cost much more than coach-class
tickets because, compared to householders, businesspeople’s demand for
travel is | back 197 d. less elastic |
front 198 Which of the following is not an example of price
discrimination? | back 198 c. An amusement park charges the same admission fee to local residents and out-of-towners |
front 199 Cell phone companies offer pricing plan alternatives in order to
convert some | back 199 a. consumer surplus into profit |