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Becky and Sarah are sisters 1who share a room. Their room can easily get messy, and their parents am always telling them to tidy it. Here are the costs and benefits to both Becky and Sarah, of taking the time to clean their room: If both Becky and Sarah clean, they each spends two hours and get a clean room. If Becky decides not to clean and Sarah does all the cleaning, then Sarah spends 10 hours cleaning (Becky spends 0) but Sarah is exhausted. The same would occur for Becky if Sarah decided not to clean—Becky spends 10 hours and becomes exhausted. If both girls decide not to clean, they both have a dirty room.
- What is the best outcome for Becky and Sarah? What is the worst outcome? (It would help you to construct a prisoner’s dilemma table.)
- Unfortunately, we know that the optimal outcome will most liker not happen, and that the sisters probably will choose the worst one instead. Explain what it is about Becky’s and Sarah’s reasoning that will lead them both to choose the worst outcome.
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- Eleanor and her little brother Josh are responsible for two chores on their family's farm, gathering eggs and collecting milk. Eleanor can gather 18 dozen eggs or collect 6 gallons of milk per week. Josh can gather 2 dozen eggs or collect 2 gallons of milk per week. a. The family wants 2 gallons of milk per week and as many eggs as the siblings can gather. Currently, they collect one gallon of milk each and as many eggs as they can. How many dozens of eggs does the family have per week? (Click to select) dozen eggs. b. If the siblings were to specialized, which should collect the milk? Eleanor c. If the siblings were to specialize, how many dozens of eggs would the family have per week? (Click to select) dozen eggs. www varrow_forwardJuanita is a talented artist who sells hand-crafted goods on her website. Juanita currently crafts and sells both tea towels and pillows. She spends 8 hours a day working on crafts. The following table gives different daily output scenarios depending on how much of her time is spent on each good. Hours Crafting Produced Choice (Tea towels) (Pillows) (Tea towels) (Pillows) A 0 4 0 B 2 3 10 4 2 16 6 1 19 0 20 PILLOWS C D E 30 25 On the following graph, use the blue points (circle symbol) to plot Juanita's initial production possibilities frontier (PPF). 20 2 10 5 0 D 8 6 4 1 NO 2 8 + 2 3 4 TEA TOWELS 5 8 7 Initial PPF 4 New PPF Suppose Juanita is currently using combination D, producing one tea towel per day. Her opportunity cost of producing a second tea towel per day is per day. Now, suppose Juanita is currently using combination C, producing two tea towels per day. Her opportunity cost of producing a third tea towel per day per day. isarrow_forwardTyped plz and asap thanksarrow_forward
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- Only typed answerarrow_forwardecoarrow_forwardJosiane and Nahed live in the beach town of batroun. They own a small business in which they make wristbands and pot holders and sell them to people on the beach. As shown in the table on the following page, josiane can make 30 wristbands per hour but only 6 pot holders. Nahed is a bit slower and can make only 24 wristbands or 4 pot holders in an hour. WRISTBANDS POT HOLDERS josiane 30 6 Nahed 24 4 a. For Josiane and for Nahed, what is the opportunity cost of a pot holder? Who has a comparative advantage in the production of pot holders? Explain your answer. b. Who has a comparative advantage in the production of wristbands? Explain your answer. c. Assume that Josiane works 20 hours per week in the business. Assuming Josiane is in business on her own, graph the possible combinations of pot holders and wristbands that she could produce in a week. Do the same for Nahedarrow_forward
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