BECO110-Assignment1-2012 10 05
BECO110-Assignment1-2012 10 05
BECO110-Assignment1-2012 10 05
b. Critics of housing vouchers (the demand-side strategy) argue that because the supply of
housing to low-income households is limited and does not respond to higher rents, demand
vouchers will serve only to drive up rents and make landlords better off. Illustrate their point with
supply and demand curves.
ANS:
a. Graph the supply and demand schedules for pizza using $5 through $15 as the value of P.
ANS:
P=5
P=10
P=15
ANS:
Qd
200
100
0
Qs
0
100
200
c.
What would happen if suppliers set the price of pizzas at $15? Explain the market
adjustment process.
ANS: The quantity of supply will increase but the quantity of demand will decrease into 0, so excess
supply will happen.
d. Suppose the price of hamburgers, a substitute for pizza, doubles. This leads to a doubling of
the demand for pizza. (At each price, consumers demand twice as much pizza as before.)
Write the equation for the new market demand for pizza.
ANS: Qd=2*(300-20P)
e. Find the new equilibrium price and quantity of pizza.
ANS: The new equilibrium price and quantity:
2*(300-20p) = 20p-100
600-40p = 20p-100
700 = 60p
P = 11.66667 = 11.7
2*(300-20*11.7) = 132
So, the new equilibrium price is $11.7, and the new equilibrium quantity is 132.
3. Illustrate the impact of the following event on equilibrium price and quantity with supply and /or
demand curves:
a. The federal government "s upports" the price of wheat by paying farmers not to plant
wheat on some of their land.
ANS: The Quantity of supply will be decrease and the equilibrium price will be increase.
ANS:
c. Incomes rise, shifting the demand for gasoline. Crude oil prices rise, shifting the s u p p l y
of gasoline.
ANS:
4. Suppose that the world price of oil i s $70 per barrel and that the United States can buy all the oil
it wants at this price. Suppose also that the demand and supply schedules for oil in the United States
are as follows:
PRICE
U.S. QUANTITY
($ PER BARREL) DEMANDED
68
70
72
74
76
16
15
14
13
12
U.S. QUANTITY
SUPPLIED
4
6
8
10
12
a. On graph paper, draw the suppl y and demand curves for the United States.
ANS:
b. With free trade in oil, what price will Americans pay for their oil? What quantity will
American buy? How much of this will be supplied by America n producers? How much will
be imported? Illustrate total imports on your graph of the U.S. oil market.
ANS: With free trade in oil, the Americans will pay $70 for their oil, and the quantity will be 15
barrel and the quantity of supplied will be 6 and the quantity of import will be 9.
c. Suppose the United States imposes a tax of $4 per barrel on imported oil. What quantity
would Americans buy? How much of this would be supplied by American producers?
How much would be imported? How much tax would the government collect?
ANS: If the United States imposes a tax of $4, the Americans need to spend $74 per barrel, and
the quantity of demanded will be 13 barrel, the quantity of supplied will be10, and the quantity of
import will be 3 barrel.
d. Briefly summarize the impact of an oil import tax by explaining who is helped and who
is hurt among the followin g groups: domestic oil consumers, domestic oil producers,
ANS:
When the price is $8 and production of 6million meals per day, the total consumer surplus:
1/2(14-8)6 = $18million.
For the same equilibrium
18 + 18 = $36 million (consumer and producer surplus are both equal to $18 million)
When the price is $8 but production was cut to 3 million meals per day, the producer surplus and
consumer surplus is:
Producer surplus and consumer surplus are the same:
(3*3)+ (1/2)(3*3) = $13.5million.
And the deadweight loss will be:
1/2(6*3) = $9million