Suppose a small economy produces only HD TV sets. In year 1, 100,000 sets are produce and sold at a price of $1,200 each. In year 2, 100,000 sets are produced and sold at a price of $1,000 each. As a result:


A.
Nominal GDP stays constant, while real GDP decreases

B.
Nominal GDP decreases, while real GDP stays constant

C.
Nominal GDP and real GDP both decrease

D.
Nominal GDP decreases, and real GDP decreases even more

B.
Nominal GDP decreases, while real GDP stays constant

Economics

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What is wearing a red hat?

a. A communist party registeration b. Use the name of the state institution to cover the private enterprises c. It is a collectively owned by villagers d. It is that the economy of China has trouble providing for all the needs of the people e. All of the above

Economics

Suppose there are different ways of producing computer chips. If you hire one worker (for the day) for each machine that you rent (for the day), you can produce 10 chips per day with each worker/machine pair for the first 60 machine/worker pairs. For the next 60 worker/machine pairs (assuming still that you hire them as pairs for the day), you are able to produce 20 chips per day with each of the additional pairs. Once you have 120 worker/machine pairs, you can only get 5 additional chips per day for each additional pair. But hiring 1 worker for each machine is not the only way to produce computer chips. Suppose you are starting from a production plan where you are using exactly as many workers as machines to produce a given level of chips. The technology is such that, starting at the

production plan where you are using the same number of workers as machines, you can replace 1 or more workers with two machines (for each worker) and get just as many chips produced. Alternatively (and again starting at the production plan where you use exactly as many workers as machines), you can replace 1 or more machines with 2 workers (for each machine) and get just as many chips produced.   Suppose the daily wage and rental rate are both equal to $100 and the firm currently has 120 units of capital. a. Illustrate the short run production function (assuming labor is variable in the short run but capital is not). (Label the intercept as well as any kink points.) b. Derive the short run cost function. (Label the intercept as well as any kink points.) c. Derive the short run marginal and average cost functions. d. How low can price fall in the short run before a firm shuts down? e. What does the average expenditure - i.e. the curve that includes all short run costs but also expenditures that are not costs in the short run - look like? Explain how this curve relates to the long run average cost curve. f. We have said that the long run supply responses to output price changes are larger than short run supply responses. In what sense is this true for the firm you have analyzed here? What will be an ideal response?

Economics