MICROECONOMICS
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781266686764
Author: Colander
Publisher: MCG
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Chapter 21, Problem 5QE
To determine
One rule of thumb and the violation of rationality assumption.
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Chapter 21 Solutions
MICROECONOMICS
Ch. 21.1 - Prob. 1QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 2QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 3QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 4QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 5QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 6QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 7QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 8QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 9QCh. 21.1 - Prob. 10Q
Ch. 21 - Prob. 1QECh. 21 - Prob. 2QECh. 21 - Prob. 3QECh. 21 - Prob. 4QECh. 21 - Prob. 5QECh. 21 - Prob. 6QECh. 21 - Prob. 7QECh. 21 - Prob. 8QECh. 21 - Prob. 9QECh. 21 - Prob. 10QECh. 21 - Prob. 11QECh. 21 - Prob. 12QECh. 21 - Prob. 13QECh. 21 - Prob. 14QECh. 21 - Prob. 15QECh. 21 - Prob. 16QECh. 21 - Prob. 17QECh. 21 - Prob. 18QECh. 21 - Prob. 19QECh. 21 - Prob. 1QAPCh. 21 - Prob. 2QAPCh. 21 - Prob. 3QAPCh. 21 - Prob. 4QAPCh. 21 - Prob. 5QAPCh. 21 - Prob. 1IPCh. 21 - Prob. 2IPCh. 21 - Prob. 3IPCh. 21 - Prob. 4IPCh. 21 - Prob. 5IPCh. 21 - Prob. 6IP
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- If the price of restaurant meals is overall higher in big cities then you might expect young people in those cities to spend more on those meals as a percent of their income than similar people in the suburbs. The answer must then lie with the preferences of those young people with their utility curves. Do you think that people reveal their preferences in part by where they choose to live?arrow_forwardwhat are some keypoints about behavioral economics?arrow_forwardPeer pressure is an important influence on the behavior of youngsters. For instance, many preteens begin smoking because their friends pressure them into being “cool” by smoking. Using utility theory, how would you explain peer pressure? How would this compare with the explanations provided by behavioral economics and neuroeconomics?arrow_forward
- Tomas buys a hamburger that doesn't taste very good. He can't return the hamburger and get his money back. Tomas decides to eat the hamburger even though it doesn't taste very good because he doesn't want to "lose the money" he paid for the hamburger. Which of the following statements are true about this situation? Check all that apply. Tomas may end up making himself worse off by eating the hamburger than by not eating the hamburger. Tomas cannot get back the money he paid for the hamburger, and so eating the hamburger doesn't really prevent him from losing the money he paid for the hamburger. By deciding to eat the hamburger, Tomas is committing the sunk cost fallacy.arrow_forwardWhy do economists use the ceteris paribus assumption?arrow_forwardQ. 4 Economists suggest that common people consciously equate marginal utility with price as they are shopping for groceries, but I don't think anyone else but economists may do this and I suspect even they slip up. It is ridiculous to describe consumer behavior in terms of a theory that consumers have never even heard of. Humans are not super calculators. Many times people buy things on a whim. For example, I buy chewing gum at the checkout counter and it is not on my original list of items to purchase. Discuss Is the Homo Economicus assumption, that is, humans have the super-cognitive ability, are super-rational, and possess full information of all relevant costs, tradeoffs, budget available, and consequences, a reasonable assumption, or is there some other psychological model of consumer behavior that seem s more reasonable and explain observed human behavior well.arrow_forward
- When consumers were given the opportunity to select a package of ground beef labeled “75% lean” or a package of ground beef labeled “25% fat,” most consumers chose “75% lean.” Why? What concept from the chapter does this illustrate? The reason is that consumers are swayed by cheap talk. Cheap talk is the concept. The reason is that consumers are much more likely to choose the alternative framed as the positive option. This is called a framing effect. The reason is that consumers infer the value of a product from positive advertising. This is called inference induction. The reason is that consumers respond better to higher numbers. They feel they are getting more because 75 is greater than 25. The concept is the endowment effect.arrow_forwardThis is an economics-based multiple-choice question... Which of the following facts could not be explained by path-dependence? (choose one) A) Sue lives in the city in which she was born. B) Maria likes to cook the dishes her mother used to cook. C) Vanessa is the first person in her family to go to college. D) Ahmed has played piano since he was four years old.arrow_forwardCritically discuss whether maximising behaviour or satisficing behaviour is the best way to explain consumer behaviourarrow_forward
- We learned that we can use choice between a gamble over someone's best and worst outcomes and getting an outcome of interest (like getting pizza) for certain as a way to assign numeric values to utility (on a scale of 0 to 1). Using this method, if you are indifferent between the following: A gamble that has a 0.3 chance of your best possible outcome (and no lower chance), and a 0.7 chance of your worst possible outcome. Getting pizza for certain. it means that your utility for getting pizza is:arrow_forwardRevealed Preference is when an individual's behavior reveals information about a person's tastes and preferences,i.e. what he likes and dislikes and how much he likes or dislikes a good. The individual demand schedule and an individual's demand curve reveals a person's tastes and preferences for a good. Specifically it reveals how much each successive unit of the good he consumes is worth to him. We can say this differently by saying the maximum price a person is willing to pay for a particular unit of the good is how much that unit of the good is worth to him. This value is revealed by his behavior or his willingness to voluntarily give a certain amount of money in exchange for that unit of the good. In other words, how many units of a good a person demands/buys at any given price. Look at the image.arrow_forwardRevealed Preference is when an individual's behavior reveals information about a person's tastes and preferences,i.e. what he likes and dislikes and how much he likes or dislikes a good. The individual demand schedule and an individual's demand curve reveals a person's tastes and preferences for a good. Specifically it reveals how much each successive unit of the good he consumes is worth to him. We can say this differently by saying the maximum price a person is willing to pay for a particular unit of the good is how much that unit of the good is worth to him. This value is revealed by his behavior or his willingness to voluntarily give a certain amount of money in exchange for that unit of the good. In other words, how many units of a good a person demands/buys at any given price. Look at the images below. multiple choices can be correct. which answers are correct? look at graph.arrow_forward
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