Microeconomics: Private and Public ChoiceDryden Press, 1992 - 656 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 79
Página 120
... lower tax brackets . Suppose the 14 percent marginal rate were cut to 10 percent . Take - home pay , per dollar of additional earnings , would expand from 86 cents to 90 cents , only a 5 percent increase . Compared with the incentive ...
... lower tax brackets . Suppose the 14 percent marginal rate were cut to 10 percent . Take - home pay , per dollar of additional earnings , would expand from 86 cents to 90 cents , only a 5 percent increase . Compared with the incentive ...
Página 135
... Lower prices will induce him to consume more , but the increase in consumption will be limited because the MU of the product will fall as consumption is expanded . Price MU > MU2 > MU , $ 1.20 MU3 1.00 MU2 MU , 0.80 d1 16 18 20 Weekly ...
... Lower prices will induce him to consume more , but the increase in consumption will be limited because the MU of the product will fall as consumption is expanded . Price MU > MU2 > MU , $ 1.20 MU3 1.00 MU2 MU , 0.80 d1 16 18 20 Weekly ...
Página 254
... lower if there were fewer gasoline stations , if they were located farther apart , and if they offered a more limited variety of service and credit plan options . Similarly , the prices of groceries might very well be slightly lower if ...
... lower if there were fewer gasoline stations , if they were located farther apart , and if they offered a more limited variety of service and credit plan options . Similarly , the prices of groceries might very well be slightly lower if ...
Contenido
PART | 1 |
Some Tools of the Economist | 29 |
Supply Demand and the Market Process | 51 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
allocation amount assets automobiles average total cost benefits breadfruit buyers capital chapter consumers consumption countries current account decision-makers decisions decline deficit demand curve dollar earnings economic profit economists effects efficiency elasticity employees employment entrepreneurs example exchange rate Exhibit expand expenditures exports factors factors of production families firm's firms foreign foreign exchange market future gain growth higher price illustrates impact important incentive income increase indicates indifference curve individuals industry inflation interest rate investment isocost isoquant Japan labor long-run lower marginal cost marginal revenue marginal tax rates market price million monetary monopolistic competition monopoly nations oligopolistic opportunity cost output owners percent political pollution potential property rights purchase pure competition quantity demanded reduce regulation relative result rise sector sell sellers short run social Soviet Union substantially substitutes supply curve trade transfers U.S. dollars voters wage rates workers