MicroeconomicsAddison-Wesley, 1994 - 655 ˹éÒ |
¨Ò¡´éÒ¹ã¹Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í
¼Å¡Òäé¹ËÒ 1 - 3 ¨Ò¡ 89
˹éÒ 105
... price - quantity point , as shown in Fig . 5.2 . The original price was $ 9.50 and the new price is $ 10.50 , so the average price is $ 10 . A $ 1 price change is 10 percent of the average price . The origi- nal quantity was 41 million ...
... price - quantity point , as shown in Fig . 5.2 . The original price was $ 9.50 and the new price is $ 10.50 , so the average price is $ 10 . A $ 1 price change is 10 percent of the average price . The origi- nal quantity was 41 million ...
˹éÒ 106
... change in the price , it is also , equivalently , the pro- portionate change in the quantity demanded divided by the proportionate change in the price . In Table 5.1 , notice that although the formula multiplies both the proportionate ...
... change in the price , it is also , equivalently , the pro- portionate change in the quantity demanded divided by the proportionate change in the price . In Table 5.1 , notice that although the formula multiplies both the proportionate ...
˹éÒ 120
... change in its price . It enables us to calculate the effect of a change in supply on price , quantity bought , and rev- enue . Elasticity of demand ( n ) is the absolute value of the percentage change in the quantity demanded divided by ...
... change in its price . It enables us to calculate the effect of a change in supply on price , quantity bought , and rev- enue . Elasticity of demand ( n ) is the absolute value of the percentage change in the quantity demanded divided by ...
©ºÑºÍ×è¹æ - ´Ù·Ñé§ËÁ´
¤ÓáÅÐÇÅÕ·Õ辺ºèÍÂ
allocative amount average total cost benefit budget line bushels buyers calculate capital cars change in price CHAPTER choices competitive consumer surplus consumption cost curve decreases demand and supply demand curve economic economists elasticity of demand equal equilibrium example factors of production falls Figure firm's firms graph haircuts higher hour household income effect increases indifference curve industry inelastic input interest rate isocost labor Lisa Lisa's long-run lower marginal cost marginal product marginal rate marginal revenue marginal revenue product marker pens million tapes monopoly movies and soda oligopoly opportunity cost output percent perfect competition Price dollars production possibility frontier profit quantity bought quantity demanded quantity supplied rate of substitution relationship rent rises sell short-run shows six-packs slope sold supply curve Swanky tapes a week tion total revenue total utility unemployment units utility per dollar wage rate wealth workers zero