problem 1 bill can produce either tables or chairs bill can work up to 10 hours a day his production possibilities are given in the table below tables chairs 0 100 10 80 20 60 30 40 40 20 50 0 1 construct the production possibilities frontier ppf
Problem 1
Bill can produce either tables or chairs. Bill can work up to 10 hours a day. His production possibilities are given in the table below:
Tables |
Chairs |
0 |
100 |
10 |
80 |
20 |
60 |
30 |
40 |
40 |
20 |
50 |
0 |
- Construct the production possibilities frontier (PPF) for Bill. Put tables on the Horizontal axis and chairs on the vertical axis.
- What is Bill’s opportunity cost of producing one additional table?
- What is Bill’s opportunity cost of producing one additional chair?
- Currently Bill is producing 20 tables and 40 chairs.
- Is this allocation of resources
? Why?
efficient
- Show this allocation on the graph and advise Bill how he can be more efficient.
Problem 2
Suppose the market for corn is given by the following equations for supply and demand:
QS = 2p − 2
QD = 13 − p
where Q is the quantity in millions of bushels per year and p is the price.
- Calculate the equilibrium price and quantity.
- Sketch the supply and demand curves on a graph indicating the equilibrium quantity and price.
- Calculate the price-elasticity of demand and supply at the equilibrium price/quantity.
- The government judges the market price is under expectations and announces a price floor equal to $7 per bushel.
- Would there be a surplus or a shortage?
- What would be the quantity of excess supply or demand that results?
- Use the graph to show you results.