1. If, in a given economy, production is taking place at a point inside the production possibility frontier:
resource allocation is technically and allocatively efficient.
resource allocation is technically efficient but allocatively inefficient.
resource allocation is technically inefficient and allocatively efficient.
resource allocation is technically and allocatively inefficient.
2. An allocation of resources is technically efficient if:
it is impossible to increase the output of a particular good.
it is possible to increase the output of all goods.
it is impossible to increase the output of one good without cutting back on the production of something else.
it is possible to increase the output of one good.
3. Consider a two-good production economy in which both goods are produced with fixed proportions production
functions. Then, some efficient allocations will exhibit unemployment of some factor providing:
the firms use the inputs in different proportions.
the firms exhibit diminishing returns to scale.
the firms exhibit increasing returns to scale.
production can never be efficient if there are unemployed inputs.
4. Suppose two goods (x and y) are being produced efficiently and that the production of x is always more labor intensive
than the production of y. Production depends only on two factors (capital and labor); these may be smoothly substituted
for each other. The total quantities of these inputs are fixed. An increase in the production of x and a decrease in the
production of y will:
increase the capital-labor ratio in each firm.
decrease the capital-labor ratio in each firm.
leave the capital-labor ratio for each firm unchanged.
increase the capital-labor ratio in y production and decrease the capital-labor ratio in x production.
5. An efficient allocation of productive inputs requires that:
each output has the same rate of technical substitution among inputs used.
each output has the same marginal rate of substitution for consumers.
each pair of outputs has the same rate of product transformation.
each individual has the same marginal rate of substitution between outputs.
6. The slope of the production possibility frontier shows:
the marginal rate of substitution between the two goods.
the relative marginal costs of the two goods.