Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

Multiple Choice Question, Quizzes of Economic Theory

It will hel the students to gain more clarity on thee basic microeconomics.

Typology: Quizzes

2019/2020

Uploaded on 04/10/2020

ajay-kumar-sahu-1
ajay-kumar-sahu-1 🇮🇳

5

(1)

1 document

1 / 5

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
Monopolistic Competition
01: In the short run, monopolistically competitive firms will
(a) realize normal profits
(b) realize excess profits
(c) lose money
(d) either lose money, make money or break even, depending on the particular firm and
industry.
02: The tendency of monopolistically competitive firms to make normal profit in the long
run arises from
(a) the counteracting effects of advertising
(b) the perfectly elastic demand curve
(c) the relative absence of barriers to entry
(d) product differentia-tion and development.
03: Monopolistic competition consists of
(a) a few firms selling differentiated products
(b) a few firms selling a uniform product
(c) many firms selling differentiated pro-ducts
(d) many firms selling a uniform product.
04: Consider monopolistically competitive firm’s demand curve; the degree of elasticity
depends on:
(a) the number of rivals and non-rivals
(b) the number of rivals and the degree of product differentiation
(c) product differentiation and development
(d) the level of profit in the firm
05: Monopolistic competition is less efficient than pure competition because
(a) of misleading advertizing
(b) of price-fixing by sellers
(c) there is too high a turnover of firms
(d) none of the above.
pf3
pf4
pf5

Partial preview of the text

Download Multiple Choice Question and more Quizzes Economic Theory in PDF only on Docsity!

Monopolistic Competition

01: In the short run, monopolistically competitive firms will

(a) realize normal profits (b) realize excess profits (c) lose money (d) either lose money, make money or break even, depending on the particular firm and

industry.

02: The tendency of monopolistically competitive firms to make normal profit in the long run arises from

(a) the counteracting effects of advertising (b) the perfectly elastic demand curve (c) the relative absence of barriers to entry (d) product differentia-tion and development.

03: Monopolistic competition consists of

(a) a few firms selling differentiated products

(b) a few firms selling a uniform product (c) many firms selling differentiated pro-ducts (d) many firms selling a uniform product.

04: Consider monopolistically competitive firm’s demand curve; the degree of elasticity depends on:

(a) the number of rivals and non-rivals (b) the number of rivals and the degree of product differentiation (c) product differentiation and development (d) the level of profit in the firm

05: Monopolistic competition is less efficient than pure competition because

(a) of misleading advertizing (b) of price-fixing by sellers (c) there is too high a turnover of firms (d) none of the above.

06: The profit-maximizing condition of a monopo-listically competitive firm is producing at the point where

(a) marginal revenue equals marginal cost (b) marginal cost equals price (c) marginal revenue equals average cost (d) total revenue is at a maximum.

07: Product differentiation refers to

(a) entirely different products produced by the same firm (b) entirely different products produced by different firms (c) consumer preferences (d) any differences perceived by consumers between products.

08: In monopolistic competition, as opposed to perfect competition,

(a) price are higher, but so is output (b) both prices and output are lower (c) output is higher because prices are lower (d) output is lower and prices are higher.

09: Multi-priced industries tend to be characteris-tic of

(a) pure competition (b) monopolis-tic competition (c) pure monopoly (d) no particular market structure.

10: In monopolistic competition, marginal revenue is

(a) less than price (b) equal to price (c) equal to demand (d) always greater than zero.

16: Ceteris paribus, high barriers to entry into an industry are likely to be:

(a) associated with a high degree of economic competition (b) as-sociated with a low degree of economic competi-tion (c) unrelated to competition (d) impos-sible to evaluate in relation to competition.

17: In the accompanying diagram, the oligopolist is

(a) making a profit (b) breaking even (c) losing money, and should close (d) losing money, but should stay in business.

18: In the most standard usage, the term "price leadership" refers to

(a) pre-emptive pricing made possible by the learning curve (b) a form, in effect, of price collusion (c) the mainten-ance of a monopolistic price (d) cutthroat competition.

19: Markup pricing:

(a) refers to the practice of setting a product’s price by adding some con-stant percentage markup to an estimate of mar-ginal cost

(b) is equivalent to profit maximi-zation under imperfect competition (c) exists exclusively in the agricultural sector of the economy (d) is adopted, in part, because of the difficulty of estimating marginal revenue and marginal cost.

20: The kinked demand curve and the preceding broken marginal-revenue curve, under non-collusive oligopoly, explain that within a certain range, high cost changes will have no effect on:

(a) price and marginal revenue (b) output and marginal cost (c) marginal revenue and marginal cost (d) price and mar-ginal cost (e) output and price

21: Of the fallowing which is an outstanding fea-ture of oligopoly?

(a) many firms (b) small firms (c) few firms (d) medium firms

22: Prices are likely to be least flexible under:

(a) pure competition (b) oligopoly (c) monopolistic competition (d) monopoly.

23: Economists are not very interested in non-collusive oligopoly as they are in collusive oligopoly because:

(a) gentlemen's agreements are not widespread in the economy (b) there is no intra-industry competition (c) it does not provide a more satisfactory explanation of price and output behavior (d) of the uncer-tainties about the behavior of other firms in the Industry

24: Countervailing power is ineffective as a competitive force during periods of inflation because:

(a) with excess demand, buyers are no longer able to restrain sellers (b) oli-gopolies tend to evolve into pure monopolies (c) with excess supply buyers are no longer able to restrain sellers (d) oligopolies tend to evolve into pure competition

25: In a situation where the demand and cost are given under oligopoly, it will pay for the oligopolist to be:

(a) expansionary (b) sales-conscious (c) restrictive (d) profit-maximizing