--%>

Maximum consumer surplus

A characteristic Hollywood star derives the maximum consumer surplus from: (i) Calvin Klein underwear. (ii) Water. (iii) Mercedes Benz 600SEs. (iv) DeBeers diamonds. (v) Publicity in "The National Enquirer."

Can someone help me in getting through this problem.

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Dynamic Tit-for-Tat Carlos and Ivana

    Carlos and Ivana are friends and roommates. They eat together despite who cooks. But this cooking game is repeated mostly every evening, across time the probable result would be which: (1) neither Carlos nor Ivana cook, nor do they eat. (2) Carlos alone cooks for both

  • Q : Market conditions operate by monopolies

    Hey friends I need your help for illustrates that this is NOT true by monopolies: (1) are generally more profitable in the long run when there are barriers to entry. (2) sometimes incur losses. (3) may try to increase demand by marketing. (4) shut down while faced by

  • Q : Income in Lorenz curve of welfare When

    When you were unconcerned regarding the welfare of other people and your income placed you into the bottom five percent of the population, in that case you would be happiest when the Lorenz curve for your country resembled as: (1) line 0A0'. (2) line

  • Q : Determine short-run supply of an

    The Christmas tree industry’s short-run supply is demonstrated as: (1) curve A. (2) curve B. (3) curve E. (4) curve F. (5) curve G.

    Q : Social Welfare and Value of Marginal

    I have a problem in economics on Social Welfare and Value of Marginal Product of Labor. Please help me in the following question. The social value of additional output from the additional units of labor is: (i) Marginal revenue of the product of labor

  • Q : Problem on Labor Union Goals Can

    Can someone please help me in finding out the accurate answer from the following question. The higher union wages would be least likely to pursue: (1) Higher union initiation fees. (2) Mandatory retirement programs

  • Q : Demand curves rightward of potential

    Monopolistically competitive firms advertise in try to shift their: (1) own supply curves leftward. (2) competitors' costs upward. (3) existing customers' demand curves leftward. (4) tax burdens to resource suppliers. (5) potential customers' demand c

  • Q : Increase revenues when price falls When

    When the price elasticity of demand for fried cheesy grits at Pixie’s Breakfast Grill is two, in that case a price cut of $2.80 to $2.00 per serving of grits would be most probably to: (1) reduce Pixie’s revenues from grits by roughly fort

  • Q : Horizontally summing the short-run

    For a competitive industry the short-run supply curve is derived through summing the short-run supply curves of all firms within the industry: (w) vertically. (x) horizontally. (y) diagonally. (z) and computing their arithmetic average.

  • Q : Production in a competitive market

    Production within a competitive market system tends to be: (1) a process that exploits labor to the maximum. (2) geared to respond to the whims of central planners. (3) relatively efficient and low cost. (4) highly automated because labor costs more t