MICROECONOMICS (LL)-W/ACCESS >CUSTOM<
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781264207718
Author: Colander
Publisher: MCG CUSTOM
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Question
Chapter 21, Problem 6IP
(a)
To determine
The reason for student choosing the first option.
(b)
To determine
The reason for student choosing the second option.
(c)
To determine
The rational choice of the assignments.
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Chapter 21 Solutions
MICROECONOMICS (LL)-W/ACCESS >CUSTOM<
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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- Suppose you won $15 on a lotto ticket at the local 7-Eleven and decided to spend all the winnings on candy bars and bags of peanuts. Candy bars cost $0.75 each while bags of peanuts cost $1.50 each. a. Construct a table showing the alternative combinations of the two products that are available. b. Plot the data in your table as a budget line in a graph. What is the slope of the budget line? What is the opportunity cost of one more candy bar? Of one more bag of peanuts? Do these opportunity costs rise, fall, or remain constant as additional units are purchased? c. Does the budget line tell you which of the available combinations of candy bars and bags of peanuts to buy? d. Suppose that you had won $30 on your ticket, not $15. Show the $30 budget line in your diagram. Has the number of available combinations increased or decreased?arrow_forwardAttempts Average / 1 6. Scarcity, opportunity cost, and marginal analysis Darnell is training for a triathlon, a timed race that combines swimming, biking, and running. Consider the following sentence: Darnell has only 20 hours this week that he can devote to training. Each hour he spends swimming is an hour that he can't spend biking or running. Which basic principle of individual choice do the statements best illustrate? People face trade-offs. Darnell can use time most efficiently by spending the same amounts of time on swimming, biking, and running. People usually exploit opportunities to make themselves better off. Darnell has an incentive to spend more time on swimming than on biking or running. O O Oarrow_forwardHow is the Rational decision making a complex process?arrow_forward
- Charles is training for a triathlon, a timed race that combines swimming, biking, and running. Consider the following sentence: Because his pool sessions are helping him swim more quickly, Charles plans to reduce by 1 hour per week the time he spends training on the bike and increase by 1 hour the time he spends in the swimming pool; however, his wife says that he should stop doing any biking and running and spend all 20 hours per week in the pool. Which basic principle of individual choice does Charles's plan illustrate that his wife's advice does not? Resources are scarce. All costs are opportunity costs. Many decisions are made on the margin. People usually exploit opportunities to make themselves better off.arrow_forwardWhat makes comsumers to take choicesarrow_forwardThink of an economic decision you made recently wherein the benefit outweighed the cost (or the cost outweighed the benefit).arrow_forward
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