Refer to Figure 4-21. The figure above represents demand and supply in the market for cigarettes. Use the diagram to answer the following questions

a. How much is the government tax on each pack of cigarettes?
b. What portion of the unit tax is paid by consumers?
c. What portion of the unit tax is paid by producers?
d. What is the quantity sold after the imposition of the tax?
e. What is the after-tax revenue per pack received by producers?
f. What is the total tax revenue collected by the government?
g. What is the value of the excess burden of the tax?
h. Is this cigarette tax efficient?

a. $1.25
b. Consumer burden = $1.00
c. Producer burden = $0.25
d. Quantity traded = 18 billion
e. Net Price to seller = $1.25
f. Tax Revenue = $22.5 billion ($1.25 × 18 billion)
g. Excess burden (deadweight loss) = $1.25 billion (1/2 × $1.25 × 2 billion)
h. Yes, a tax is efficient if it imposes a small excess burden relative to the tax revenue it raises.

Economics

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a. Nation A's interest earnings from foreign operations. b. Changes in foreigners' bank accounts in Nation A. c. Foreign purchases of Nation A's Treasury bills. d. All the above are included.

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A "devaluation" occurs when

A) the official price of a currency is raised. B) the official price of a currency is lowered. C) a nation's currency depreciates under a flexible exchange rate system. D) a nation's currency appreciates under a flexible exchange rate system. E) none of the above

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