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Econ 8010 Midterm No Notes, No Calculators 100 Points, 75 Minutes

This document contains instructions for a midterm exam in economics with 3 questions. Question 1 involves a hospital choosing to hire up to 3 doctors from a set of applicants and discusses restrictions placed on the hospital's choices. Question 2 involves a widget manufacturing firm's production function and whether it will use more or fewer machines given changes in input prices. Question 3 examines properties of a consumer's utility function that is homogeneous of degree two, including whether their preferences and demand functions have certain separable properties.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views3 pages

Econ 8010 Midterm No Notes, No Calculators 100 Points, 75 Minutes

This document contains instructions for a midterm exam in economics with 3 questions. Question 1 involves a hospital choosing to hire up to 3 doctors from a set of applicants and discusses restrictions placed on the hospital's choices. Question 2 involves a widget manufacturing firm's production function and whether it will use more or fewer machines given changes in input prices. Question 3 examines properties of a consumer's utility function that is homogeneous of degree two, including whether their preferences and demand functions have certain separable properties.

Uploaded by

Sky Shephered
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Econ 8010 Midterm

No Notes, No Calculators
100 Points, 75 Minutes

Nathan Yoder
University of Georgia

Fall 2017

1
1. (30 points) A hospital is looking to fill up to three open positions in its residency
program. There are three doctors who might apply: Alice (a), Bob (b), and Claire (c).
Thus, its set of alternatives is the set of possible hiring decisions:

X = {∅, { a}, {b}, {c}, { a, b}, {b, c}, { a, c}, { a, b, c}}.

For any Y ⊆ { a, b, c}, define the power set of Y as

2Y ≡ { Z | Z ⊆ Y }.

2Y is the set of hiring decisions that the hospital can make when it receives applica-
tions from the doctors in Y.

The hospital’s budget sets B ∈ B are the sets of hiring decisions it can make after
receiving applications from some combination of Alice, Bob, and Claire:

B = {2Y | Y ⊆ { a, b, c}}

• When it receives applications from Alice and Bob, it will choose to hire Bob
(and not Alice):
C (2{a,b} ) = {b}

• When it receives applications from Bob and Claire, it will choose to hire Claire
(and not Bob):
C (2{b,c} ) = {c}

(a) (15 points) What restrictions does the weak axiom place on the hospital’s hiring
decision C (2{a,b,c} ) when it receives applications from Alice, Bob, and Claire?

(b) (15 points) What restrictions does the weak axiom place on the hospital’s hiring
decision C (2{a,c} ) when it receives applications from Alice and Claire?

2. (35 points) A widget manufacturing company produces a single output, widgets q.


In doing so, it uses two inputs: machines m and sprockets s. These inputs must be
consumed in whole (integer) quantities: m, s ∈ Z+ .

2
When two sprockets are fed into a machine, it will produce one widget. More for-
mally, the firm’s production function f (m, s) is given by

f (m, s) = min{m, 2s}

(a) (15 points) Show that f is supermodular.

(b) (10 points) If the price of sprockets increases, will the firm use more or fewer
machines? Why?

(c) (10 points) If the price of widgets increases, will the firm use more or fewer
machines? Sprockets? Why?

3. (35 points) A consumer’s preferences are described by a utility function that is ho-
mogeneous of degree two: For all α > 0 and x ∈ R+
L , u ( αx ) = α2 u ( x ).

(a) (7 points) Are this consumer’s preferences homothetic? Show that they are or
give a counterexample.

(b) (7 points) Show that this consumer’s Walrasian demand is multiplicatively sep-
arable in prices and wealth: x ( p, w) = y0 (w)y1 ( p) for some y0 : R+ → R+ and
y 1 : R+
L → R L . What is y ( w )?
+ 0

(c) (7 points) Show that this consumer’s indirect utility is multiplicatively separa-
ble in prices and wealth: v( p, w) = v0 (w)v1 ( p) for some v0 : R+ → R+ and
v 1 : R+
L → R . What is v ( w )?
+ 0

(d) (7 points) Show that this consumer’s Hicksian demand is multiplicatively sep-
arable in prices and required utility level: h( p, ū) = g0 (ū) g1 ( p) for some g0 :
R+ → R+ and g1 : R+
L → R L . What is g ( ū )?
+ 0

(e) (7 points) Show that for all p, g1 ( p)v1 ( p) = y1 ( p).

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