When do normal profit occur


Assignment:

Question 1
Antitrust legislation is an attempt by government to make competition
equal.
efficient.
structured.
fair.

Question 2
An early piece of anti-trust legislation is the
Sherman Act.
Mann Act.
DIDMCA of 1980.
Federal Reserve Act of 1913.

Question 3
The Herfindahl-Hirschman Index is used to measure
brand recognition.
the ease of market entry.
market power.
none of these choices.

Question 4
A tax on an imported product is called a
tariff.
quota.
dumping signal.
all of these choices.

Question 5
According to economic theory, profits are maximized at the rate of output where
price equals total revenue.
marginal revenue equals marginal cost.
economic profits are zero.
price and marginal revenue are equal.

Question 6
Executives should
spend an additional dollar on an activity if consumers value it by more than a dollar.
do more of something if marginal revenue is positive.
pend an additional dollar on an activity if consumers value it by less than a dollar.
do more of something if average revenue is greater than zero.

Question 7
Entry of new firms causes

accounting profits to go to zero.
market share to grown.
economic profits to go to zero.
total revenue to be maximized.

Question 8
If a firm has market power it may be able
to protect market share.
to continue to earn economic profits.
minimize marginal costs.
to maximize total revenue.

Question 9
Government may make it possible

to create a network externality.
to find 'winners' in the stock market.
for a firm to become a monopoly.
all of these choices.

Question 10
If a firm's product becomes a commodity
the firm gains market power.
the firm's strategy has apparently paid off.
the firm has become a monopoly.
the firm looses market power.

Question 11
Brand names help
create commodities.
maintain market power.
create competition.
keep economic profits at zero.

Question 12
If firms are exiting a market then
economic profits must be zero
economic profits must be greater than zero
economic profits must be less than zero
both economic and accounting profits must be greater than zero.

Question 13
Fixed costs

do not vary with output
vary with output
do not vary with price
vary with price

Question 14
Variable costs
do not vary with price.
do not vary with output.
vary with price.
vary with output.

Question 15
The key to understanding the movement in stock prices is to understand

expectations.
market share.
accounting profits.
the firms contribution to the social welfare of its employees.

Question 16
Companies spend ____ on pricing decisions.

too much time
the right amount of time
too little time
too much money

Question 17
Knowing demand is equivalent to knowing the
employee.
customer.
average investor.
economic profit.

Question 18
In general, elasticities measure
the change in quantity demanded when a product attribute changes.
the change in consumer spending when income changes.
the change in an attribute for a percentage change in price.
the percentage change in the quantity demanded resulting from a fixed percentage change in some attribute.

Question 19
According to theory, where is the right price determined?
where average cost equals marginal cost.
where marginal revenue equals marginal cost.
where total revenue equals total cost.
where there is a markup of 300 percent.

Question 20
The area below the demand curve but above the market price line is
represents a Nash game outcome.
consumer surplus.
total revenue.
total profit.

Question 21
Firms try to capture consumer surplus by
repeat Nash equilibrium games.
finding markets with many competitors.
exploiting suppliers.
personalized pricing.

Question 22
If a firm can charge different prices for each consumer it can practice
second degree price discrimination.
perfect price discrimination.
third degree price discrimination.
consumer surplus reversal

Question 23
In a monopoly-given demand, the price is found where
consumer surplus is maximized.
average costs equal price.
price equals marginal revenue.
marginal revenue equals marginal cost.

Question 24
Commodity markets resemble
monopolistic markets.
competitive markets.
oligopolistic markets.
factor markets.

Question 25
When a firm has market power, price should be

determined by equating average cost and marginal cost to determine quantity and then setting the price using that quantity and the demand curve.
determined by equating marginal revenue and average revenue to determine quantity and then setting the price using that quantity and the demand curve.
determined by equating marginal revenue and marginal cost to determine quantity and then setting the price using that quantity and the demand curve.
determined by equating marginal revenue and long-run average cost to determine quantity and then setting the price using that quantity and the demand curve.

Question 26
Pricing is made difficult by
firms having multiple products.
concerns about the response of competitors.
concerns about consumer linkages of price and quality.
all of these choices make pricing difficult.

Question 27
Technology has allowing pricing to become
automatic.
personalized.
standardized to minimize costs.
regularized.

Question 28
In a product line extension
a constant price elasticity of demand is assumed.
a firm introduces different products and lets buyers self-select themselves into different groups.
is able to identify different markets at very low costs.
demand is assumed to be elastic

Question 29
If a firm is unable to distinguish different customer groups
it will not use product differentiation.
it will be unable to maximize profits.
it will find the quantity to product indeterminate.
it might use a product line extension.

Question 30
The use of "anytime minutes" and "after-hour minutes" suggests that price is being influenced by
extensions.
costs.
time.
constant elasticities.

Question 31
When pricing is used to limit entry, it is often described as

effective.
predatory.
exclusive.
aggressive.

Question 32
When firm's price based on the packaging of several products, they are
using a limit price.
predatory in their marketing.
bundling.
none of these choices.

Question 33
When the pricing of one product produced by a firm adversely affects the revenue earned by another product of the same firm, the second product has been
cannibalized.
tied.
bundled.
sacrificed.

Question 34
Grocery stores often replace
low profit margin goods with services.
low profit margin goods with high profit margin goods.
high profit margin goods with low profit margin goods.
goods with one type of elasticity with goods of similar elasticities.

Question 35
Information

is difficult to own.
is never a separate attribute of a product.
is easy to connect to physical product.
is not scarce in the knowledge economy.

Question 36
In the knowledge economy
physical property rights appear to be lacking.
property rights have become stronger.
property rights have been replaced by network externalities.
intellectual property rights appear to be lacking.

Question 37
Some products of the knowledge economy
have an initial marginal cost that is very low and then rises.
have no marginal costs.
have an initial marginal cost that is very high and then falls to zero.
none of these choices.

Question 38
For patents to be effective
small networks.
network externalities must be realized.
property rights need to be enforced.
there needs to be fewer economies of scope.

Question 39
Diminishing marginal returns to labor means
that each additional worker costs more.
that each additional worker produces less than the previous worker.
that each additional worker costs less.
that total product grows at a constant rate when workers are added to production.

Question 40
If diminishing marginal returns is in effect
marginal costs fall.
marginal costs rise.
average costs fall.
average revenue is constant.

Question 41
Marginal costs and marginal benefits
do not include sunk costs.
include sunk costs.
are really just fixed costs.
are not useful in decision making.

Question 42
Market prices contain
some information.
all information.
only past information.
a bias for old stocks.

Question 43
Capital structure refers to
the ratio of equity to debt.
the ratio of common stock to preferred stock.
the ratio of debt to equity.
the ratio of cash to current liabilities

Question 44
A risk-free rate can be measured by
the rate of inflation.
the rate on corporate bonds.
the Federal Reserve's discount rate.
a rate of a Treasury security.

Question 45
The Capital Asset Pricing Model.
is a way to formulate the cost of capital.
is a way to calculate the weighted cost of capital.
is a usual model for stock market investing.
none of these choices

Question 46
Market prices
are limited in their information content.
contain all available information.
contain only past information.
none of these choices.

Question 47
Internal markets
can be useful suppliers of information.
suffer from some of the same problems that external markets suffer.
are becoming increasingly popular.
all of these choices.

Question 48
Economic profit equals
net operating profit after taxes plus the cost of capital.
net operating profit after taxes divided by the cost of capital.
net operating profit after taxes multiplied by the cost of capital.
net operating profit after taxes minus the cost of capital.

Question 49
The equity premium is the return
investors expect to equal a risk free investment.
covered by stockholder insurance.
on bonds.
investors expect above a risk free investment.

Question 50
Entry into a competitive market will continue until
economic profits are zero.
normal profits are zero.
when accounting losses are zero.
a. and b. are true

Question 51
Normal profit
is when economic profits are zero.
is the profit that competition will allow.
is the opportunity cost of capital.
all of these choices.

Question 52
To practice second-degree price discrimination
different markets must be able to communicate with each other.
different markets must have the same number of customers.
similar markets must have similar elasticities.
different markets must have different elasticities.

Question 53
Pricing can be
in the form of a markup.
can be based on peak loads.
a barrier to entry.
all of these choices.

Question 54
With free entry

economic profits are possible over the long run.
economic profits are possible but only over limited amounts of time.
economic profits are not possible.
the cost of capital will not be covered

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Microeconomics: When do normal profit occur
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