Chapter 8 States Labor Supply More Inelastic More Elastic

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subject Authors N. Gregory Mankiw

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Application: The Costs of Taxation 2229
28. Refer to Figure 8-26. How much is producer surplus at the market equilibrium?
29. Refer to Figure 8-26. How much is total surplus at the market equilibrium?
30. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government places a $3 tax per unit on this good. What price
will consumers pay for the good after the tax is imposed?
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31. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government places a $3 tax per unit on this good. What price
will sellers receive for the good after the tax is imposed?
32. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government places a $3 tax per unit on this good. How many
units of this good will be bought and sold after the tax is imposed?
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Application: The Costs of Taxation 2231
33. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government places a $3 tax per unit on this good. How much
is consumer surplus after the tax is imposed?
34. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government places a $3 tax per unit on this good. How much
is producer surplus after the tax is imposed?
35. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government places a $3 tax per unit on this good. How much
tax revenue is collected after the tax is imposed?
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2232 Application: The Costs of Taxation
36. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government increases the size of the tax on this good from
$3 per unit to $6 per unit. Will the tax revenue collected from the tax increase, decrease, or stay
the same?
37. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government places a $3 tax per unit on this good. How much
is total surplus after the tax is imposed?
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Application: The Costs of Taxation 2233
38. Refer to Figure 8-26. Suppose the government places a $3 tax per unit on this good. How much
is the deadweight loss from this tax?
Figure 8-27
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2234 Application: The Costs of Taxation
39. Refer to Figure 8-27. Suppose that Market A is characterized by Demand 1 and Supply 1, and
Market B is characterized by Demand 2 and Supply 1. If an identical tax is imposed on each
market, the tax will create a larger deadweight loss in which market? Explain.
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Application: The Costs of Taxation 2235
Figure 8-28
40. Refer to Figure 8-28. Suppose that Market A is characterized by Demand 1 and Supply 1, and
Market B is characterized by Demand 1 and Supply 2. If an identical tax is imposed on each
market, the tax will create a larger deadweight loss in which market? Explain.
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2236 Application: The Costs of Taxation
41. Provide several examples of important taxes on labor in the United States. For a typical worker,
what is the marginal tax rate on labor income once all the labor taxes are summed?
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Application: The Costs of Taxation 2237
42. Is the United States labor supply more inelastic or more elastic? Briefly summarize the
competing theories.
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2238 Application: The Costs of Taxation
43. The demand for energy drinks is more elastic than the demand for milk. Would a tax on energy
drinks or a tax on milk have a larger deadweight loss? Explain.
44. Suppose that the market for product X is characterized by a typical, downward-sloping, linear
demand curve and a typical, upward-sloping, linear supply curve. Suppose the price elasticity of
supply is 0.7. Will the deadweight loss from a $3 tax per unit be smaller if the absolute value of
the price elasticity of demand is 0.6 or if the absolute value of the price elasticity of demand is
1.5?
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Application: The Costs of Taxation 2239
45. Suppose the demand curve and the supply curve in a market are both linear, and suppose the price
elasticity of supply is 0.5. Will the deadweight loss from a $3 tax per unit be larger if the price
elasticity of demand is 0.3 or if the price elasticity of demand is 0.7?
46. Suppose that the market for product X is characterized by a typical, downward-sloping, linear
demand curve and a typical, upward-sloping, linear supply curve. If a $2 tax per unit results in a
deadweight loss of $200, how large would be the deadweight loss from a $4 tax per unit?
47. Suppose that the market for product X is characterized by a typical, downward-sloping, linear
demand curve and a typical, upward-sloping, linear supply curve. If a $2 tax per unit results in a
deadweight loss of $200, how large would be the deadweight loss from a $6 tax per unit?
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2240 Application: The Costs of Taxation
48. Suppose the demand curve and the supply curve in a market are both linear. If a $2 tax per unit
results in a deadweight loss of $200, how large would be the deadweight loss from a $3 tax per
unit?
49. Suppose the demand curve and the supply curve in a market are both linear. To begin, there was
a $5 tax per unit, and the $5 tax resulted in a deadweight loss of $1,500. Now, the tax per unit is
higher, with the higher tax resulting in a deadweight loss of $6,000. What is the amount of the
new tax per unit?
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Application: The Costs of Taxation 2241
Figure 8-29
50. Refer to Figure 8-29. As the size of the tax increases from $3 to $6 to $9, what happens to tax
revenues?
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2242 Application: The Costs of Taxation
51. Refer to Figure 8-29. As the size of the tax increases from $3 to $6 to $9, what happens to the
deadweight loss from the tax?
52. Refer to Figure 8-29. If you were a policymaker choosing between a $3, $6, or $9 tax, which
would you choose and why?
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Application: The Costs of Taxation 2243
53. Describe the Laffer curve.

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