Midterm Exam +sol Econ 301
Midterm Exam +sol Econ 301
Department of Economics
ECON 301 INTERMEDIATE MICROECONOMIC THEORY I
Instructor: Uma Kaplan
Summer 2015
MIDTERM EXAMINATION 1
May 28, 2015, 11:45AM-13:15PM
Name:
I.D:
2. If Marie has a positively sloped Engel Curve with good X, it means that:
(a) Maries income and substitution effects for good X are always in the same
direction
(b) Good Y must be a normal good to Mary (who consumes only goods X and Y)
(c) All of the above
(d) None of the above
3. The Slutsky equation:
I. breaks down the total effect of a change in Px on the quantity demanded for X into
income and substitution effects
II. holds only when good X is a normal good
III. relies on the assumption that the consumer spends his entire income
(a) I
(b) I and II
(c) I and III
(d) I and II and III
4. When the price of x rises, Alex responds by changing his demand for x. The
substitution effect is the part of this change that represents his change in demand
a. holding the prices of substitutes constant.
b. if he is allowed to substitute as much x for y as he wishes.
c. if his money income is held constant when the price of x changes.
d. None of the above
5.
Madonna buys only two goods. Her utility function is Cobb-Douglas. Her demand
functions have which of the following properties?
a. Her demand for one of the two goods does not depend on income.
b. Her demand for neither good depends on income.
c. Her demand for each of the goods depends on income and on the
prices of both goods.
d. Her demand for each of the two goods depends only on her income
and on the price of that good itself.
e. One of the goods is an inferior good and the other is a normal good.
1
2
1
2
dx
2x
U ( x, y ) 1
MUy(x, y) =
y
2y
MUx(x, y) =
(b) This person faces positive prices Px > 0 and Py > 0, and has positive income M >0.
Derive his demand functions, x* = x(Px, Py, M) and y* = y(Px, Py, M).
Answer:
Because the indifference curves are well behaved, the optimal solution occurs at
the point of tangency between an indifference curve and the budget constraint.
This we can use the first order condition (FOC) to solve for the optimal
bundle:
2.
(12 POINTS) Consider a consumer who consumes two goods: CDs (good 1) and
pizzas (good 2). Her utility function can be represented by u(x1, x2) = x1x2. Her income
is m = $200. The prices are pi= $20 and p2 = $10.
(3 points) a) The utility function v(x1, x2) = In x1 + ln x2 also represents her
preferences. Can you explain why?
For the rest of the problem, you may pick either u or v as her utility function.
Answer:
a) Observe that v(x1, x2) = ln u(x1, x2). From 2(a), f(u) = ln u is a monotonic
transformation. Monotonic transformations of a utility function represent the same
preferences.
(4 points) b) Derive her optimal consumption bundle. Show the complete calculation,
and illustrate your answer graphically (draw the indifference curves and the budget
constraint).
Answer
b) Use the optimum condition
MRS = slope of budget line, and the budget constraint to derive the optimal
consumption bundle. In this case,
MRS
MU1
x
2
MU 2
x1
p1
20
2
p2
10
x2
2
x1
=> x2 = 2x1
p1
25
2
p2
10
x2
5
x1
2
(2 points) d) Is the consumer better off or worse off? Explain. Compare your answer
with that to part c).
Answer:
The consumer is worse off. Her utility is 50 before the tax and 40 after the tax.
3.
(6 POINTS)
Miriam has quasilinear preferences over consumption of coffee (x1) and muffins (x2)
given by U(x1, x2) =5ln(x1) + x2. Her income is equal to m =$10, and p2 =$1, p1 =$5.
a) Find MRS as a function of consumptions of two commodities. Write down the
budget constraint and the expression necessary for finding the optimal consumption.
Answer:
The MRS for these preferences is MRS(x1, x2) = 5/ x1 . (Notice that this does not
depend on x2, over which utility is linear.) Thus we have , for an interior solution
(with x1 > 0 and x2 > 0) are:
(1) p1x1 + p2x2 = m
(2) MRS(x1, x2) = p1/p2
5/x1= p1/p2
b) Find optimal consumption of x1 and x2 (assume interior solution).
Answer:
Solving for the two above equations for x1 and x2 we get demand functions
x1 =5p2 /p1 and x2 = (m 5p2 )/p2
as long as m 5p2 (if m < 5p2 we have a corner solution with x1 = mp1 and x2 = 0.)
c) Suppose price of coffee drops from p1 =5 to p'1 =1. Find the substitution effect.
Answer:
Given that m = 10 and p2 = 1, at price p1 = 5, our Lolas demand for coffee x1 is x1(p1,
p2, m) = 5*1/5 = 1. (Also, x2(p1, p2, m) = (10 51)/1 = 5.)
With a price of p1 1, her demand is x1 ( p1, p2 , m) 5*1/1 5
The total effect on demand for x1 resulting from the price change is
x1 x1 ( p1, p2 , m) x1 ( p1 , p2 , m) 5 1 4 .
To find the substitution effect, we first find m p1x1 p2 x2 , the hypothetical income
that would be necessary for her to buy her initial bundle with the price change, which
is m 1*1 1*5 6 .
Next we need to find the bundle Lola would actually choose if her income were m'= 6.
(We know she can afford the initial bundle, but thats not necessarily what she buys
given the new relative prices.) At p1 = 1, p2 = 1 and m = 6, we have that
x1 ( p1, p2 , m) 5*1/1 5 .
The substitution effect is then x1s x1 ( p1, p2 , m) x1 ( p1, p2 , m) 5 1 4 .
d) Find the income effect.
Answer:
The income effect on the demand for x1 is x1n x1 ( p1, p2 , m) x1 ( p1, p2 , m) 5 5 0 .
With quasilinear preferences, the good in which utility is linear (here, x2) absorbs all
income effects.