This problem refers to Leontief’s input—output model, first discussed in the Exercises 1.1.24 and 1.2.39. Consider three industries I 1 , I 2 , I 3 , each of which produces only one good, with unit prices p 1 = 2 , p 2 = 5 , p 3 = 10 (in U.S. dollars), respectively. Let the three products be labeled good 1, good 2, and good 3. Let A = [ a 11 a 12 a 13 a 21 a 22 a 23 a 31 a 32 a 33 ] = [ 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 ] be the matrix that lists the interindustry demand in terms of dollar amounts. The entry a i j tells us how many dollars’ worth of good i are required to produce one dollar’s worth of good j. Alternatively, the interindustry demand can be measured in units of goods by means of the matrix B = [ b 11 b 12 b 13 b 21 b 22 b 23 b 31 b 32 b 33 ] , where b i j tells us how many units of good i are required to produce one unit of good j. Find the matrix B for the economy discussed here. Also, write an equation relating the three matrices A, B, and S. where S = [ 2 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 10 ] is the diagonal matrix listing the unit prices on the diagonal. Justify your answer carefully.
This problem refers to Leontief’s input—output model, first discussed in the Exercises 1.1.24 and 1.2.39. Consider three industries I 1 , I 2 , I 3 , each of which produces only one good, with unit prices p 1 = 2 , p 2 = 5 , p 3 = 10 (in U.S. dollars), respectively. Let the three products be labeled good 1, good 2, and good 3. Let A = [ a 11 a 12 a 13 a 21 a 22 a 23 a 31 a 32 a 33 ] = [ 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 ] be the matrix that lists the interindustry demand in terms of dollar amounts. The entry a i j tells us how many dollars’ worth of good i are required to produce one dollar’s worth of good j. Alternatively, the interindustry demand can be measured in units of goods by means of the matrix B = [ b 11 b 12 b 13 b 21 b 22 b 23 b 31 b 32 b 33 ] , where b i j tells us how many units of good i are required to produce one unit of good j. Find the matrix B for the economy discussed here. Also, write an equation relating the three matrices A, B, and S. where S = [ 2 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 10 ] is the diagonal matrix listing the unit prices on the diagonal. Justify your answer carefully.
Solution Summary: The author explains how to calculate the polynomial of the given system at the degree le 3.
This problem refers to Leontief’s input—output model, first discussed in the Exercises 1.1.24 and 1.2.39. Consider three industries
I
1
,
I
2
,
I
3
, each of which produces only one good, with unit prices
p
1
=
2
,
p
2
=
5
,
p
3
=
10
(in U.S. dollars), respectively. Let the three products be labeled good 1, good 2, and good 3. Let
A
=
[
a
11
a
12
a
13
a
21
a
22
a
23
a
31
a
32
a
33
]
=
[
0.3
0.2
0.1
0.1
0.3
0.3
0.2
0.2
0.1
]
be the matrix that lists the interindustry demand in terms of dollar amounts. The entry
a
i
j
tells us how many dollars’ worth of good i are required to produce one dollar’s worth of good j. Alternatively, the interindustry demand can be measured in units of goods by means of the matrix
B
=
[
b
11
b
12
b
13
b
21
b
22
b
23
b
31
b
32
b
33
]
, where
b
i
j
tells us how many units of good i are required to produce one unit of good j. Find the matrix B for the economy discussed here. Also, write an equation relating the three matrices A, B, and S. where
S
=
[
2
0
0
0
5
0
0
0
10
]
is the diagonal matrix listing the unit prices on the diagonal. Justify your answer carefully.
I want to learn this topic l dont know anything about it
Solve the linear system of equations attached using Gaussian elimination (not Gauss-Jordan) and back subsitution.
Remember that:
A matrix is in row echelon form if
Any row that consists only of zeros is at the bottom of the matrix.
The first non-zero entry in each other row is 1. This entry is called aleading 1.
The leading 1 of each row, after the first row, lies to the right of the leading 1 of the previous row.
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Introduction to experimental design and analysis of variance (ANOVA); Author: Dr. Bharatendra Rai;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSFo1MwLoxU;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY