Diktat Pie
Diktat Pie
Diktat Pie
PPF
Supply Demand
Tax Incidence
Elasticity
Elasticy x CS
1. Opportunity Cost
Suppose that France and Germany both produce schnitzel and wise. The following table
shows combination of the goods that each country can produce in a day :
France Germany
Wine (bottles) Schnitzel (pounds) Wine (bottles) Schnitzel (pounds)
0 8 0 15
1 6 1 12
2 4 2 9
3 2 3 6
4 0 4 3
5 0
a. Who has a comparative advantage in producing wine? Who has a comparative advantage
in producing schnitzel?
When France produces 1 more bottle of wine, it produces 2 fewer pounds of schnitzel.
When Germany produces 1 more bottle of wine, it produces 3 fewer pounds of schnitzel.
Therefore, France’s opportunity cost of producing wine–2 pounds of schnitzel–is less than
Germany’s–3 pounds of schnitzel. When Germany produces 1 more pound of schnitzel, it
produces 0.33 fewer bottles of wine. When France produces 1 more pound of schnitzel, it
produces 0.50 fewer bottles of wine. Therefore, Germany’s opportunity cost of producing
schnitzel–0.33 bottles of wine–is less than that of France–0.50 bottles of wine. We can conclude
that Germany has the comparative advantage in making wine and that France has the
comparative advantage in making schnitzel.
2. Opportunity Cost
You have exams in economics and chemistry coming up, and you have 5 hours available
for studying. The following table shows the trade-offs you face in allocating the time will
spend studying for each subject :
Hours Spent Studying Midterm Score
Choice Economics Chemistry Economics Chemistry
A 5 0 95 70
B 4 1 93 78
C 3 2 90 84
D 2 3 86 88
E 1 4 81 90
F 0 5 75 91
Make sure to lavel the values where your PPF intersects the vertical and horizontal axes
Compresed axis
If you spend all five hours studying for your economics exam, you will score a 95 on the
exam; therefore, your production possibilities frontier will intersect the vertical axis at 95.
If you spend all five hours studying for your chemistry exam, you will score a 91 on the
exam; therefore, your production possibilities frontier will intersect the horizontal axis at
91.
b. Label the points representing choice C and D. If you are at choice C, what is your
opportunity cost of increasing your chemistry score by 4 points?
C→D
chemistry score +4 points
economics score -4 points.
Therefore, the opportunity cost of increasing your chemistry score by four points
is the four point decline in your economics score
3. Tax Incidence
You are given the following information about the market for motorcycles.
Market Supply: P = 4Q
400 – 4Q = 4Q
8Q = 400
Q = 50 motorcycles
d. Suppose that the government decides to impose an excise tax of $80 per motorcycle on
producers in this market. What will be the number of motorcycles sold in this market
once this tax is imposed?
Psnew = 80 + 4Q.
80 + 4Q = 400 – 4Q
8Q = 320 , Q = 40 motorcycles.
e. Given the tax described in part (d), what will be the tax incidence on consumers?
To find the tax incidence we must first find the price consumers pay once the excise tax
is imposed.
P = 400 – 4Q
The consumer tax incidence can be calculated as the change in price times the number of
motorcycles sold once the tax is imposed.
Consider an economy with the supply of soccer balls qs = 4p and the demand for soccer
balls given by qs = 270 – 5p.
a) Calculate the equilibrium price and quantity.
Subtitute p = 30 →
Now suppose the government imposes a sales tax, such that consumers much pay $5 to the
government each time they buy a soccer ball.
Supply is unchanged,
e) Draw a graph marking the after tax consumer surplus and producer surplus as well as
the tax revenue
5. Elasticity of demand
If the price rises by 3 %, the quantity demanded falls by 1.5 %. Calculate the price
elasticity of demand.
e = - 1.5/3 = - 0.5 → 0.5
e= = 1 (unitary)
1. e = 0 2. e = infinity 3. e = 1 (unitary)
8. Elasticity and tax incidence
Answer