Chapter 1: Problem 9
Explain the "other things equal", or ceteris paribus assumption of economic analysis.
Short Answer
Step by step solution
Key Concepts
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
/*! This file is auto-generated */ .wp-block-button__link{color:#fff;background-color:#32373c;border-radius:9999px;box-shadow:none;text-decoration:none;padding:calc(.667em + 2px) calc(1.333em + 2px);font-size:1.125em}.wp-block-file__button{background:#32373c;color:#fff;text-decoration:none}
Learning Materials
Features
Discover
Chapter 1: Problem 9
Explain the "other things equal", or ceteris paribus assumption of economic analysis.
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.
Get started for free
Is it ever possible to have decreasing relative costs? Why or why not? Illustrate the effect which decreasing relative costs would have on the shape of the production possibility curve.
When we say that macromodels of the economy are mechanistic, does this mean that the economy works like a machine?
"Economic principles are generalizations." Explain what is meant by this statement and why it is true.
A small country, Ruritania, produces only two goods, shoes and soybeans. Its economic resources are limited, so any factors of production (land, labor or capital) which are added to shoe production must be taken from soybean production, and vice versa. Consequently, to produce more of one good it must be willing to produce less of another. The table below shows various combinations of maximum quantities of shoes and soybeans which Ruritania can produce. Using the data in the table, construct a production-possibility curve for Ruritania.
Define, and distinguish between macroeconomics and microeconomics.
What do you think about this solution?
We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.