Chapter 3: Problem 13
What is the difference between a movement factor and a shift factor?
Chapter 3: Problem 13
What is the difference between a movement factor and a shift factor?
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Some goods are bought largely because they have "snob appeal." For example, the residents of Beverly Hills gain prestige by buying expensive items. In fact, they won't buy some items unless they are expensive. The law of demand, which holds that people buy more at lower prices than higher prices, obviously doesn't hold for the residents of Beverly Hills. The following rules apply in Beverly Hills: high prices, buy; low prices, don't buy. Discuss.
Compare the ratings for television shows with prices for goods. How are ratings like prices? How are ratings different from prices?
"The price of a bushel of wheat, which was $$\$ 3.00$$ last month, is $$\$ 3.70$$ today. The demand curve for wheat must have shifted rightward between last month and today." Discuss.
When speeding tickets were $$\$ 100$$, usually 500 speeders were on the roads each month in a given city; when ticket prices were raised to \(\$ 250\), usually 215 speeders were on the roads in the city each month. Can you find any economics in this observation?
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