EBK INTERMEDIATE MICROECONOMICS AND ITS
EBK INTERMEDIATE MICROECONOMICS AND ITS
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781305176386
Author: Snyder
Publisher: YUZU
Question
Book Icon
Chapter 9, Problem 9.5P

a)

To determine

To discuss: The quantity of gasoline that an individual owner sells per day. Also, determine the long-run average cost and marginal cost of the output level.

b)

To determine

To discuss: The price of gasoline in long-run equilibrium and also demand and Number of gas stations based on the Subpart (a) results.

c)

To determine

To compute: the price of gasoline in long-run equilibrium and also demand and Number of gas stations.

d)

To determine

To construct: The graph showing the results.

Blurred answer
Students have asked these similar questions
Suppose the quantity of apples supplied in yourmarket is 2,400. If there are 60 apple producers,each with identical cost structures, how manyapples does each producer supply to the market?
Assume a number of street vendors sell hamburgers in a city. Each vendor has a marginal cost of 30 NOK per hamburger sold and there are no fixed costs. The maximum number of hamburgers that any vendor can sell is 100 per day. a) If the market is perfectly competitive and the price of each hamburger is 40 NOK. How many hamburgers does each street vendor want to sell and what is each vendor’s profit per day assuming the desired quantity is sold?b) Why is this solution not a long run equilibrium?c) Suppose all the vendors merges and thus appears as a monopolist in the market. After merging marginal cost is constant. Make a diagram and explain the optimal solution for the monopolist.d) How can you explain that the solution from c) is such that the profit is maximized?e) Explain the social costs of the monopoly situation in this market. f) Suppose many consumers in this hamburger market became “addicted”. How would you explain this change in consumers demand and how would it affect social…
A gizmo producer operates in a perfectly competitive market with a price of $100 for a can of gizmos. The gizmo producer has a marginal cost curve equal to 0.52q, where q is the number of cans of gizmos produced. The gizmo producer currently produces 192 cans of gizmos. Should the gizmo producer produce 193 cans of gizmos instead? No, the marginal cost of the 192nd box is above marginal revenue, so production is already too high. No, while the marginal cost of the 192nd box is below marginal revenue, the marginal cost of 3rd box is above it, so profit is already maximized. None of these answers. Yes, the marginal cost of the 192nd box is below marginal revenue, so production is too low, and profits are not maximized. 20 MacBook esc 20 F3 OOD F1 F2 F4 2$ W R tab 6 5 %A4 %# 3
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Similar questions
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
  • Text book image
    Economics:
    Economics
    ISBN:9781285859460
    Author:BOYES, William
    Publisher:Cengage Learning
Text book image
Economics:
Economics
ISBN:9781285859460
Author:BOYES, William
Publisher:Cengage Learning