Principles of Microeconomics (12th Edition)
Principles of Microeconomics (12th Edition)
12th Edition
ISBN: 9780134078816
Author: Karl E. Case, Ray C. Fair, Sharon E. Oster
Publisher: PEARSON
Question
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Chapter 12, Problem 1.1P
To determine

The effect of changes in price of oil along with subsidy on the price of corn, wheat, and farmland.

Expert Solution & Answer
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Explanation of Solution

The effect of changes in price of oil along with subsidy on the price of corn is depicted in Figure 1 using the demand and supply model.

Principles of Microeconomics (12th Edition), Chapter 12, Problem 1.1P , additional homework tip  1

In Figure 1, the horizontal axis represents the quantity of corn, whereas the vertical axis denotes the price of corn.

The effect of changes in price of oil along with subsidy on the price of farmland is depicted in Figure 2 using the demand and supply model.

Principles of Microeconomics (12th Edition), Chapter 12, Problem 1.1P , additional homework tip  2

In Figure 2, the horizontal axis represents the quantity of farmland, whereas the vertical axis denotes the price of farmland.

The effect of changes in price of oil along with subsidy on the price of other agricultural products such as wheat is depicted in Figure 3 using the demand and supply model.

Principles of Microeconomics (12th Edition), Chapter 12, Problem 1.1P , additional homework tip  3

In Figure 3, the horizontal axis represents the quantity of wheat, whereas the vertical axis denotes the price of wheat.

When the oil prices increase simultaneously with the rolling out of subsidy in ethanol production, the demand for ethanol will increase. As the demand for ethanol increases, the demand for corn used for its production also increases. This shifts the demand curve of corn to the right from D0 to D1 as in Figure 1. This increases the price of the corn.

As a result of it, the market value of farmland will increase due to the increase in demand for land as depicted in Figure 2 causing the rightward shift of the demand for land from D0 to D1 as in figure 2.

From now, more of the farmland would be devoted to the production of corn; less of it would be available for the production of other agricultural products such as wheat. This implies that the supply of wheat would decrease causing a leftward shift of the supply curve from S0 to S1 as in Figure 3, thereby increasing the price of wheat.

When the oil prices decreases, the demand for ethanol will decrease. As the demand for ethanol decreases, the demand for corn used for its production also decreases. This shifts the demand curve of corn to the left from D1 to D0 as in Figure 1. This decreases the price of the corn.

As a result of it, the market value of farmland will decrease due to the decrease in demand for land for corn production as depicted in Figure 2 causing the leftward shift of the demand for land from D1 to D0 as in Figure 2. This decreases the price of the farmland.

From now, less of the farmland would be devoted to the production of corn; more of it would be available for the production of other agricultural products such as wheat. This implies that the supply of wheat would increase causing a rightward shift of the supply curve from S1 to S0 as in figure 3, thereby decreasing the price of wheat.

Economics Concept Introduction

Demand: Demand is the quantity of goods and services that people are willing and able to buy at different prices in a given period of time.

Supply: Supply is the quantity of goods and services that people are willing to sell at different prices in a given period of time.

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Exercise 6 Imagine that you head production of a multinational food processing company. The ongoing uncer- tainty about costs means that you are unsure of the future cost of one of your inputs, x2. Your firm's production function is y = f(x1, x2) = x²x²² The output price p is 1000, x1 = 27, and wx₁ = 60. 1. Suppose the current input price is Wx2 = 50. Solve for the optimal choice of x2. 2. Now suppose that the probability the input price remains 50 is 0.65 and the probability that Wx2 60 is 0.35. Solve for the optimal choice of x2. Round down to the nearest integer. = 3. Finally, suppose the costs do actually rise, i.e., Wx2 = 60. Calculate the difference in profit from the uncertainty in (2) vs. the certainty in (1).
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