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Survey of Economics International Edition 7th Edition by Irvin B. Tucker – Test Bank

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Survey of Economics International Edition 7th Edition by Irvin B. Tucker – Test Bank

Chapter 6

Production Costs

MULTIPLE CHOICE

  1. Topic: Explicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: a

Explicit costs would include

  1. rent.
  2. the interest loss of the business owner on money withdrawn from his/her saving account and invested in the business.
  3. the loss of rent on a building the business owner owns and uses in his/her business.
  4. the opportunity costs of the business owner’s time.
  5. the use of tools owned by the business owner and dedicated to the business.
  1. Topic: Explicit cost, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: d

Unlike implicit costs, explicit costs:

  1. reflect opportunity costs.
  2. include the value of the owner’s time.
  3. are not included in the accounting statement of the firm.
  4. are actual cash payments.
  5. do not change with the output rate of the firm.
  1. Topic: Explicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: CA, Answer: d

A young chef is considering opening his own sushi bar. To do so, he would have to quit his current job, which pays $20,000 a year, and take over a store building that he owns and currently rents to his brother for $6,000 a year. His expenses at the sushi bar would be $50,000 for food and $2,000 for gas and electricity. What are his explicit costs?

  1. $26,000.
  2. $66,000.
  3. $78,000.
  4. $52,000.
  5. $72,000.
  1. Topic: Explicit cost, Difficulty: E, Type: SA, Answer: e

Which of the following is not an explicit cost?

  1. Salaries.
  2. Sales taxes.
  3. Utilities, such as gas and electricity.
  4. Insurance.
  5. The firm owner’s time.
  1. Topic: Explicit cost, Difficulty: E, Type: SA, Answer: c

Cash payments to a steel mill for steel used in production would be an example of:

  1. sunk costs.
  2. fixed costs.
  3. explicit costs.
  4. implicit costs.
  5. entrepreneurial costs.
  1. Topic: Explicit cost, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: b

Sam quits his job as an airline pilot and opens his own pilot training school. He was earning $40,000 as a pilot. He withdraws $10,000 from his savings where he was earning 6 percent interest and uses the money in his new business. He uses a building he owns as a hanger and could rent it out for $5,000 per year. He rents a computer for $1,200, buys office supplies for $500, rents an airplane for $6,000, pays $1,300 for fuel and maintenance, and hires one worker for $30,000. Sam’s total revenue from pilot training classes this year equaled $90,400. Sam’s explicit costs this year equals:

  1. $84,400.
  2. $39,000.
  3. $55,000.
  4. $45,600.
  5. $40,000.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: d

Paul’s Plumbing is a small business that employs 12 people. Which of the following is the best example of an implicit cost incurred by this firm?

  1. The tax payments on property owned by the firm.
  2. The wages paid to the 12 employees.
  3. The half of the payroll taxes on the wages of the 12 employees paid by the employers, but not the half paid by the employees.
  4. The accounting services provided free of charge to the firm by Paul’s wife, who is an accountant.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: d

Which of the following would be considered an implicit cost?

  1. Health insurance of employees paid for by the firm
  2. The water bill of the firm
  3. The salaries paid to the managers of the firm
  4. Foregone rent on assets owned by the firm
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: RE, Answer: b

The opportunity costs associated with the use of resources owned by a firm are:

  1. externalities.
  2. implicit costs.
  3. explicit costs.
  4. sunk costs.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: a

Payments to nonowners of a firm are called:

  1. implicit costs.
  2. accounting costs.
  3. explicit costs.
  4. economic costs.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: a

The amount of money that could have been made by renting a piece of land to be used for building an office building instead of using the land for employee parking is an:

  1. implicit cost.
  2. accounting cost.
  3. explicit cost.
  4. pure economic cost.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: d

Implicit costs are best thought of as:

  1. variable costs.
  2. marginal costs.
  3. accounting costs.
  4. opportunity costs.
  5. sunk costs.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: E, Type: SA, Answer: c

Which of the following is an implicit cost of going to college?

  1. Tuition.
  2. Books.
  3. Lost income.
  4. Future income.
  5. Room and board.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: c

Which of the following are implicit costs for a typical firm?

  1. Insurance costs.
  2. Electricity costs.
  3. Opportunity costs of capital owned and used by the firm.
  4. Cost of labor hired by the firm.
  5. The cost of raw materials.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: d

A firm’s opportunity cost of using resources provided by the firm’s owners is called:

  1. sunk costs.
  2. fixed costs.
  3. explicit costs.
  4. implicit costs.
  5. entrepreneurial costs.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: CA, Answer: a

A young chef is considering opening his own sushi bar. To do so, he would have to quit his current job, which pays $20,000 a year, and take over a store building that he owns and currently rents to his brother for $6,000 a year. His expenses at the sushi bar would be $50,000, for food and $2,000 for gas and electricity. What are his implicit costs?

  1. $26,000.
  2. $66,000.
  3. $78,000.
  4. $52,000.
  5. $72,000.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: b

Two friends, Diane and Sam, own and run a bar. Diane tends bar on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday and receives a wage in addition to tips. Sam tends bar on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday and receives only tips. Which of the following represents an implicit cost of operating the bar?

  1. Diane’s wage.
  2. Sam’s time.
  3. Diane’s tips.
  4. Sam’s tips.
  5. Both Diane’s and Sam’s tips.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: RE, Answer: a

Implicit costs are:

  1. the opportunity costs of using resources owned by the entrepreneur in his/her own business.
  2. payments the business owner must make on borrowed funds.
  3. costs which vary as the level of output varies.
  4. those payments the business owner makes in cash.
  5. the payments the business owner makes for public relations, such as donations to charity.
  1. Topic: Implicit cost, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: b

Sam quits his job as an airline pilot and opens his own pilot training school. He was earning $40,000 as a pilot. He withdraws $10,000 from his savings where he was earning 6 percent interest and uses the money in his new business. He uses a building he owns as a hanger and could rent it out for $5,000 per year. He rents a computer for $1,200, buys office supplies for $500, rents an airplane for $6,000, pays $1,300 for fuel and maintenance, and hires one worker for $30,000. Sam’s total revenue from pilot training classes equaled $90,400. Sam’s implicit costs for this year are equal to:

  1. $84,400.
  2. $39,000.
  3. $55,000.
  4. $45,600.
  5. $40,000.
  1. Topic: Explicit and implicit cost, Difficulty: M, Type: RE, Answer: d

The sum of the explicit and implicit costs incurred in the production process is called

  1. fixed cost.
  2. sunk cost.
  3. marginal cost.
  4. total cost.
  1. Topic: Economic and accounting profit, Difficulty: D, Type: SA, Answer: a

Which of the following is most likely to be true of economic and accounting profits?

  1. Economic profits are less than accounting profits.
  2. Accounting profits are less than economic profits.
  3. Economic profits plus accounting profits equal zero.
  4. Accounting profits minus economic profits equal zero.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: d

Economic profit is:

  1. total revenues minus variable costs.
  2. total revenues minus private costs.
  3. total revenues minus explicit costs.
  4. total revenues minus total costs.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: a

The difference between a firm’s total revenues and total costs when all explicit and implicit costs are included is the firm’s:

  1. economic profit.
  2. accounting profit.
  3. opportunity cost of capital.
  4. long-run average total cost.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: E, Type: SA, Answer: e

If a firm has total revenue of $200 million, explicit costs of $190 million, and implicit costs of $30 million, its economic profit is:

  1. $200 million.
  2. $70 million.
  3. $10 million.
  4. ‑$10 million.
  5. ‑$20 million.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: d

A firm has $200 million in total revenue and explicit costs of $190 million. Suppose its owners have invested $100 million in the company at an opportunity cost of 10 percent interest rate per year. The firm’s economic profit is:

  1. $400 million.
  2. $100 million.
  3. $80 million.
  4. zero.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: d

Economic profit is:

  1. always less than zero.
  2. never less than accounting profit.
  3. less than accounting profit if implicit costs are zero.
  4. less than accounting profit if implicit costs are greater than zero.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: e

An economist left her $100,000‑a‑year teaching position to work full‑time in her own consulting business. In the first year, she had total revenue of $200,000 and business expenses of $100,000. She made a (an):

  1. economic profit.
  2. economic loss.
  3. implicit profit.
  4. accounting loss but not an economic loss.
  5. zero economic profit.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: b

Economic profit equals accounting profit minus:

  1. explicit costs.
  2. implicit costs.
  3. fixed costs.
  4. variable costs.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: b

An economist left his $100,000‑a‑year teaching position to work full‑time in his own consulting business. In the first year, he had total revenue of $200,000 and business expenses of $150,000. She made a (an):

  1. implicit profit.
  2. economic loss.
  3. economic profit.
  4. accounting loss but not an economic loss.
  5. zero economic profit.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: d

A firm has $200 million in total revenue and explicit costs of $190 million. If its owners have invested $100 million in the company at an opportunity cost of 10 percent interest per year, the firm’s accounting profit is:

  1. $400 million.
  2. $100 million.
  3. $80 million.
  4. $10 million.
  5. zero.
  1. Topic: Economic profit, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: c

Suppose a firm has total revenue of $200 million, explicit costs of $190 million, and implicit costs of $20 million. This firm’s accounting profit is:

  1. $80 million.
  2. $70 million.
  3. $10 million.
  4. ‑$10 million.
  1. Topic: Normal profit, Difficulty: M, Type: RE, Answer: b

When total revenue minus total cost is equal to zero, the firm is:

  1. earning above-average economic profit.
  2. earning a normal profit.
  3. losing too much money to stay in business.
  4. earning abnormally low profits.
  1. Topic: Normal profit, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: b

Normal profit is a term for:

  1. explicit profit.
  2. the minimum profit to keep a firm in operation.
  3. the accounting profit forgone.
  4. pure economic profit.
  1. Topic: Normal profit, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: d

Normal profit is defined as a (an):

  1. foregone percent rate of return.
  2. opportunity profit.
  3. implicit profit.
  4. minimum necessary to keep a firm in operation.
  1. Topic: Normal profit, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: d

Economists say that a firm has a normal profit when:

  1. it earns a return of at least 10 percent.
  2. its accounting profit is positive.
  3. it can pay all its variable costs.
  4. its economic profit is zero.
  1. Topic: Fixed input, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: d

Which of the following is an example of a fixed input?

  1. The acreage of a farmer’s land.
  2. Machinery.
  3. The size of a firm’s plant.
  4. All of the above.
  1. Topic: Variable input, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: c

Variable inputs are defined as any resource that:

  1. varies with the size of the firm’s plant.
  2. cannot be changed as output changes.
  3. can be changed as output changes.
  4. can be increased or decreased hourly.
  5. Topic: Short run, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: b

During the short-run period of the production process, a firm will be:

  1. unable to vary any of its factors of production.
  2. able to vary some of its factors of production.
  3. able to vary all of its factors of production.
  4. able to vary the size of its plant.
  1. Topic: Short run, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: c

The short run is a time period such that:

  1. the existing firms in the market do not have sufficient time to change the amounts of any of the inputs that they employ.
  2. the existing firms in the market do not have sufficient time to either increase or decrease their current rate of output.
  3. the existing firms in the market do not have sufficient time to increase the size of their existing plant or build a new factory.
  4. new firms may build plants and enter the industry.
  1. Topic: Short run, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: a

The short run is a period of time:

  1. in which a firm uses at least one fixed input.
  2. that is long enough to permit changes in the firm’s plant size.
  3. in which production occurs within one year.
  4. in which production occurs within six months.
  1. Topic: Short run, Difficulty: M, Type: RE, Answer: b

During the course of a week, McDonald’s has enough time to hire or layoff workers, but it does not have enough time to expand its kitchen or add an additional seating area. In this situation, McDonald’s:

  1. has no fixed costs.
  2. is in the short run.
  3. suffers an economic loss.
  4. earns a large profit.
  1. Topic: Short run, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: c

During the short run, a firm has enough time to adjust:

  1. its technology.
  2. its fixed inputs.
  3. its variable inputs.
  4. all of its inputs-both fixed and variable.
  1. Topic: Long run, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: d

Which of the following factors of production is not variable in the long run?

  1. the size of the firm’s plant.
  2. property taxes on the assets of the firm.
  3. highly trained labor.
  4. All factors of production are variable in the long run.
  1. Topic: Long run, Difficulty: M, Type: RE, Answer: c

The long run is a period of:

  1. at least one year.
  2. sufficient length to allow a firm to expand output by hiring additional workers.
  3. sufficient length to allow a firm to alter its plant size and capacity and all other factors of production.
  4. sufficient length to allow a firm to transform economic losses into economic profits by hiring better workers.
  1. Topic: Long run, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: b

The long run is a period of time:

  1. that is too short to change the size of a firm’s plant.
  2. that is long enough to permit changes in all the firm’s inputs, both fixed and variable.
  3. in which production occurs beyond one year.
  4. in which production occurs beyond five years.
  1. Topic: Long run, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: a

The long run is a planning period:

  1. during which the firm can vary all inputs including its plant size.
  2. less than six months.
  3. less than one year.
  4. less than five years.
  1. Topic: Long run, Difficulty: D, Type: RE, Answer: d

In the long run, total fixed cost:

  1. falls.
  2. rises.
  3. is constant.
  4. does not exist.
  1. Topic: Long run, Difficulty: E, Type: RE, Answer: e

Which of the following statements is true?

  1. Economic profit equals accounting profit minus implicit costs.
  2. The short run is any period of time in which there is at least one fixed input.
  3. A fixed input is any resource for which the quantity cannot change during the period under consideration.
  4. In the long run there are no fixed costs.
  5. All of the above.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: RE, Answer: b

The increase in total output that results from a unit increase in one unit of a variable input is equal to the input’s:

  1. total product.
  2. marginal product.
  3. average product.
  4. marginal cost.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: a

If two workers can produce 22 units of output, and the addition of a third worker increases output to 30 units, the marginal product of the third worker is

  1. 8 units.
  2. 10 units.
  3. 22 units.
  4. 30 units.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: E, Type: SA, Answer: b

A firm can produce 450 gallons of milk per day with 4 workers and 500 gallons per day with 5 workers. The marginal product of the fifth worker expressed in gallons per worker per day, is:

  1. 35.
  2. 50.
  3. 70.
  4. 350.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: c

A farm is able to produce 9,000 pints of strawberries per season on 10 acres. It adds one more acre and is able to produce 12,000 pints per season. The marginal product of land for this farm is:

  1. 900 pints per acre per year.
  2. 1,000 pints per acre per year.
  3. 3,000 pints per acre per year.
  4. 12,000 pints per acre per year.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: a

If the units of variable input in a production process are 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, and the corresponding total outputs are 30, 34, 37, 39, and 40, respectively. The marginal product of the fourth unit is:

  1. 2.
  2. 1.
  3. 37.
  4. 39.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: c

A farm is able to produce 5,000 bushels of peaches per season on 100 acres. Assume it adds one more acre and is able to produce 6,000 bushels per season. The marginal product of the additional acre of land for this farm is:

  1. 6,000 bushels per acre per year.
  2. 5,000 bushels per acre per year.
  3. 1,000 bushels per acre per year.
  4. 11,000 bushels per acre per year.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: c

A farm is able to produce 10,000 bushels of peanuts per season on 10 acres. Assume it adds one more acre and is able to produce 12,000 bushels per season. The marginal product of the additional acre of land for this farm is:

  1. 10,000 bushels per acre per year.
  2. 1,200 bushels per acre per year.
  3. 2,000 bushels per acre per year.
  4. 12,000 bushels per acre per year.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: b

A farm can produce 10,000 bushels of wheat per year with 5 workers and 13,000 bushels with 6 workers. The marginal product of the sixth worker for this farm is:

  1. 10,000 bushels.
  2. 3,000 bushels.
  3. 500 bushels.
  4. 23,000 bushels.

57. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: E, Type: SA, Answer: d

Suppose when a car wash has 2 washing stations and 5 workers and is able to wash 100 cars per day. When it adds a third station, but no more workers, it is able to wash 150 cars per day. The marginal product of the third washing station appears is:

  1. 100 cars per day.
  2. 150 cars per day.
  3. 5 cars per day.
  4. 50 cars per day.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: RE, Answer: d

Marginal product measures the change in:

  1. total cost brought about by changing production by one unit.
  2. product price brought about by changing production by one unit.
  3. a firm’s revenue brought about by changing production by one unit.
  4. the firm’s output brought about by employing one additional unit of input.
  5. the firm’s profit brought about by employing one more input.

59. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: CA, Answer: d

When a total output curve is falling, its corresponding marginal product curve is:

  1. vertical.
  2. horizontal.
  3. rising.
  4. falling.

Exhibit 1 Production of pizza data

Workers

Pizzas

0

0

1

4

2

10

3

15

4

18

5

19

  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: d

Exhibit 1 shows the change in the production of pizzas as more workers are hired. The marginal product of the second employee equals:

  1. 4.
  2. 10.
  3. 14.
  4. 6.
  5. 15.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: e

Exhibit 1 shows the change in the production of pizzas as more workers are hired. The marginal product of the fifth employee equals:

  1. 4.
  2. 18.
  3. 19.
  4. 3.
  5. 1.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: E, Type: CA, Answer: c

Exhibit 1 shows the change in the production of pizzas as more workers are hired. The total output of pizzas after hiring 4 workers is:

  1. 4.
  2. 15.
  3. 18.
  4. 3.
  5. 1.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: c

Exhibit 1 shows the change in the production of pizzas as more workers are hired.
The marginal product of the labor input begins to fall with the employment of the
________ worker.

  1. first
  2. second
  3. third
  4. fourth
  5. fifth
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: d

Exhibit 1 shows the change in the short run production of pizzas as more workers are hired. The table shows marginal product increasing between the 0 to 2 hired workers. A possible reason for this increased marginal product is:

  1. increased wages.
  2. increases in plant size.
  3. decreases in fixed cost.
  4. increased division of labor as additional workers are hired.
  5. increased product price.
  1. Topic: Law of diminishing returns, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: e

Exhibit 1 shows the change in the short-run production of pizzas as more workers are hired. The table shows the marginal product of the labor input is decreasing with the hiring of the third worker. A possible reason for this diminishing marginal product is:

  1. decreased wages.
  2. increases in plant size.
  3. decreases in fixed cost.
  4. increased division of labor as additional workers are hired.
  5. decreases in labor productivity.

Exhibit 2 Cost schedule for pizza production

Pizzas

Labor

Cost

Energy

Cost

Materials

Cost

0

$ 10

$ 0

$ 0

1

10

12

4

2

24

22

8

3

40

30

12

4

60

36

16

5

90

40

20

  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: CA, Answer: d

Exhibit 2 shows the labor, energy, and materials cost of making various quantities of pizzas. The table shows that the labor cost of making pizzas will:

  1. increase at a decreasing rate.
  2. decrease at a decreasing rate.
  3. decrease at an increasing rate.
  4. increase at an increasing rate.
  5. increase at a constant rate.
  1. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: CA, Answer: a

Exhibit 2 shows the labor, energy, and materials cost of making various quantities of pizzas. The table shows that the energy cost of making pizzas will:

  1. increase at a decreasing rate.
  2. decrease at a decreasing rate.
  3. decrease at an increasing rate.
  4. increase at an increasing rate.
  5. increase at a constant rate.
  6. Topic: Marginal product, Difficulty: M, Type: CA, Answer: e

Exhibit 2 shows the labor, energy, and materials cost of making various quantities of pizzas. The table shows that the materials cost of making pizzas will:

  1. increase at a decreasing rate.
  2. decrease at a decreasing rate.
  3. decrease at an increasing rate.
  4. increase at an increasing rate.
  5. increase at a constant rate.
  1. Topic: Law of diminishing returns, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: d

In the short run, a firm will eventually experience rising per-unit costs because of:

  1. economies of scale.
  2. diseconomies of scale.
  3. the law of supply.
  4. the law of diminishing returns.
  1. Topic: Law of diminishing returns, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: c

Which of the following is an implication of the law of diminishing returns?

  1. Total output will decline as more workers are hired.
  2. In the long run, average total cost will eventually decline as output is expanded.
  3. In the short run, expansion of output will eventually lead to increases in marginal cost and average total cost.
  4. A doubling of all inputs will lead to more than a doubling of output.
  1. Topic: Law of diminishing returns, Difficulty: M, Type: SA, Answer: b

Bill lives in Montana and likes to grow zucchini. He applies fertilizer to his crops twice during the growing season and notices that the second layer of fertilizer increases his crop, but not as much as the first layer. What economic concept best explains this observation?

  1. The law of diminishing marginal utility.
  2. The law of diminishing returns.
  3. Return equalization principle.
  4. The principal-agent problem.
  1. Topic: Law of diminishing returns, Difficulty: D, Type: CA, Answer: c

The law of diminishing marginal returns implies that, in the short run:

  1. output must fall beyond a certain point.
  2. price must fall beyond a certain point.
  3. the marginal product of the variable input must eventually decrease.
  4. wages of workers must eventually increase.
  5. total cost must fall beyond a certain point.

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