--%>

Consuming a grouping of goods problem

A household utmost it’s utility by consuming a grouping of goods which exhausts income when, for each and every good, the: (i) Marginal utilities are equivalent. (ii) Prices are equivalent. (iii) Ratios of marginal utility or price are equivalent. (iv) Net utilities are equivalent.

Please someone suggest me the right answer.

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : LEAST capable inventories of

    A competitive firm is LEAST capable to adjust its inventories throughout the: (w) market period. (x) short-run. (y) intermediate period. (z) long-run. Hello guys I want your advice. Please recommend some views for above Eco

  • Q : Exploiting the economies of Scope Bobby

    Bobby Lee’s dairy has gainfully expanded beyond butter, fresh milk and cheese, by providing Organizmic Fertilizer, guided by ATV tours for the visitors, and Granny Lee’s Exfoliating Body Yogurt. The Clyde County Business News trumpets that the Bobby Lee ha

  • Q : What makes goods or resources valuable

    Can someone help me in finding out the precise answer from the given options. Modifying the goods or resources in manners that make them more valuable is: (1) Production. (2) Profitability. (3) Consumption. (4) Distribution.

  • Q : Problem on price elasticity The firm’s

    The firm’s net revenue grows whenever the price of a good is cut when the price elasticity of: (i) Demand surpass the price elasticity of supply. (ii) Replacement goods are less than one. (iii) Supply is in an associatively elastic range. (iv) D

  • Q : Exploitation and Competitive Markets

    The removal of exploitation of labor (or wage payments beneath the value to the society of each and every individual worker’s productive contribution) is automatic when business decision makers: (1) Should set wages via collective bargaining agreements by labor

  • Q : Market demands for automobiles The

    The market demands for automobiles are not rapidly and directly influenced by modifications in: (i) Income. (ii) Gasoline prices. (iii) Salaries paid to auto-workers. (iv) The number of legal drivers. (v) Preferences and tastes.

    Q : Profit from cost structures and market

    When cost structures and the market demands facing each of the given types of firms were identical, in that case the greatest profits would be generated through a: (1) pure monopolist. (2) price discriminating monopolist. (3) perfectly competitive fir

  • Q : Hicks Model of Collective Bargaining I

    I have a problem in economics on Hicks Model of Collective Bargaining. Please help me in the following question. The period of union strikes and the equilibrium wage rate at conclusion of a strike are the focus of: (i) Taft-Hartley Act of 1948. (ii) B

  • Q : Experiencing the economies of Scale Let

    Let assume that an auto manufacturer which can produce 10 cars at an average cost of $8000 per car. When the manufacturer enlarges output to 100 cars, then the average cost of production falls to $5000 per car. This firm is experiencing the: (1) Raised demand. (2) Eco

  • Q : Product markets and labor markets

    Relative to firms which are price takers in both the product markets and labor markets, firms through market power in both the product markets and labor markets tend to. (1) Hire fewer workers and pay them less. (2) Rely more heavily on the screening and signaling thr