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Author Question: Suppose Ralph sells bento lunches, which have the following demand: pR = 100 qR 0.5qD where pR ... (Read 28 times)

dollx

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Suppose Ralph sells bento lunches, which have the following demand:
 
  pR = 100  qR  0.5qD
  where pR is the price of Ralph's bentos and qR is the number of bentos Ralph sells. qD is the number of bentos Ralph's rival, Dave, sells. Dave's demand is given by:
   pR = 100  qD  0.5qR
  where pD is the price Dave can sell his bentos for. Suppose each seller has a cost per unit (average and marginal) of 1.
  a. How does this game differ from the Cournot model with identical products? Why do the demand curves indicate that the goods are differentiated  not perfect substitutes for one another?
  b. Compute the best response functions for each seller and the Nash Equilibrium outputs and prices.

Question 2

Kisa consumes the same amount of cigarettes each week regardless of her income (assume that her income is sufficiently large such that the quantity is affordable). The Equivalent Variation equals the Compensating Variation.
 
  Indicate whether the statement is true or false



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ms_sulzle

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Answer to Question 1

a. The output of the rival firm has a smaller effect on the demand for a firm's output than the
firm's own output. This means that customers view the goods as substitutes, but the own-price effect is stronger than the substitute's price effect. For example, the market price of coke is more responsive to the quantity of coke supplied than it is to the quantity of Pepsi supplied. In the traditional Cournot model, the goods are perfect substitutes and each firm's output had the same impact on the market prices. Here, it is possible for the goods to have different prices, but in Cournot's model, the goods are sold at the same price.
b. The profit functions are
R = (100 - qR - 0.5qD)qR - qR
D = (100 - qD - 0.5qR)qD - qD
The best response functions are
qR = (99 - 0.5qD)/2
qD = (99 - 0.5qR)/2
Solving these simultaneously yields:
qR = qD = 39.6
Each firm sells at the price 40.6.

Answer to Question 2

True . The difference between the measures lies with the income effect/elasticity. There is no income effect for Kisa therefore the measures will be the same.




dollx

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Reply 2 on: Jul 1, 2018
YES! Correct, THANKS for helping me on my review


epscape

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Reply 3 on: Yesterday
Great answer, keep it coming :)

 

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