Where do economic agents such as individuals, firms, and nations interact with each other?
A) in public locations monitored by the government
B) in any arena that brings together buyers and sellers
C) in any physical location where people can physically get together for selling goods, such as shopping malls
D) in any location where transactions can be monitored by consumer groups and taxed by the government
Answer: B
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A temporary increase in the price of oil would
A) increase both short-run and long-run aggregate supply. B) decrease both short-run and long-run aggregate supply. C) increase short-run aggregate supply and decrease long-run aggregate supply. D) decrease short-run aggregate supply and leave long-run aggregate supply unchanged.
Price discrimination is prevented in situations where
A) customers can resell the good. B) firms have monopolies. C) there are legal barriers to entry. D) there are no close substitutes for the good or service. E) customers have different willingnesses to pay for the good.
The equilibrium in the prisoner's dilemma is a dominant strategy Nash equilibrium
Indicate whether the statement is true or false
Consider the following T-account for National City Bank:
Assets Liabilities Reserves $10,000 Deposits $100,000 Loans $90,000 If the required reserve ratio is lowered to 8 percent, how much can National City loan out? A) $10,000 B) $8,000 C) $2,000 D) $0