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Author Question: All used cars are lemons or peaches. Owners know whether or not their car is a lemon, but buyers do ... (Read 132 times)

Mr.Thesaxman

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All used cars are lemons or peaches. Owners know whether or not their car is a lemon, but buyers do not; that is, the quality of a car is private information. There are many more buyers than sellers.
 
  Buyers value a peach at 4,000 and a lemon at 200; owners value a peach at 3,000 and a lemon at 100 . Owners can have their cars inspected for 100 . If they do have their car inspected, they will receive a certificate that shows whether the car is a lemon or a peach. Show that owners of peaches will have their cars inspected and will sell those cars for 4,000 . Show also that the owners of lemons will not obtain a certificate and will sell their cars for 200 .

Question 2

Refer to Figure 4-6. At the price P2, consumers are willing to buy the Q2 pounds of granola. Is this an economically efficient quantity?
 
  A) Yes, otherwise consumers would not buy Q2 units.
  B) Yes, because the price P2 shows what consumers are willing to pay for the product.
  C) No, the marginal benefit of the last unit (Q2 ) exceeds the marginal cost of that last unit.
  D) No, the marginal cost of the last unit (Q2 ) exceeds the marginal benefit of the last unit.



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mrphibs

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Answer to Question 1

If the owners of peaches obtain a certificate stating that their cars are not lemons, they will be able to sell their cars to buyers for 4,000, thus gaining from trade. Those who own lemons will not obtain a certificate since the certificate would not help them convince buyers their cars are peaches. Buyers will therefore conclude that any owner who is selling a car without a certificate must own a lemon. This is an application of Michael Spence's theory of signaling. In a market with asymmetric information and adverse selection, individuals could choose costly signals in order to reveal their private information. Since buyers cannot distinguish between lemons and peaches, there is asymmetric information in the used car market. With the certificate, sellers are sending a signal to buyers about the true quality of their car.
See Michael Spence, Job Market Signaling, Quarterly Journal of Economics August 1973, pp 355374

Answer to Question 2

C




Mr.Thesaxman

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Reply 2 on: Jun 29, 2018
Excellent


deja

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Reply 3 on: Yesterday
Thanks for the timely response, appreciate it

 

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