--%>

Problem on spending shares of national income

The view which big corporations unfailingly capture much stable shares of spending out of national income is: (i) Accepted by almost all the economists. (ii) Contrary to the confirmation of turnover among big over the decades. (iii) The symptom of strong competition. (iv) Most notably disputed by the John Kenneth Galbraith.

Can someone please help me in finding out the accurate answer from the above options.

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • 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 : Comparative statics and consumer demand

    Explain the methodological procedure called comparative statics.  What does this procedure imply regarding the nature of the consumer demand curve?

  • Q : Problem on Analysis Paralysis Consumers

    Consumers confronting huge arrays of choices whenever they contemplate choosing one brand of toothpaste out of 50, or whether to purchase pulp-free, not-from-concentrate orange juice, calcium-fortified, or the extra-pulp, non-calcified, from-concentrate version, frequ

  • Q : Free products Select the right answer

    Select the right answer of the question .Free products offered by firms :1) may or may not be free to society, but are never free to individuals. 2) may or may not be free to individuals, but are never free to society. 3) are poduced and distributed at no cost to soci

  • Q : International federal or agreements and

    Consider goods for that various people are willing and capable to pay much more than the costs of production therefore widespread shortages exist. International federal or agreements, state and local laws as well as regulations are probably key factor

  • Q : External costs and external benefits

    Question: (a)         Explain the impact of external costs and external benefits on resource allocation; (b)     

  • Q : Profit-maximizing price The

    The profit-maximizing price for “Silver Screen Classic” of Nostalgia DVDs is: (i) $6 per copy. (ii) $10 per copy. (iii) $12 per copy. (iv) $16 per copy. (v) $20 per copy.

    Q : Firms demand for labor Assume that the

    Assume that the international auto industry has become monopolistically competitive and you run a small automaker. The events which would not directly influence your firm’s demand for labor comprise: (i) Sales of your company’s most admired car unexpectedl

  • Q : Price elasticity of demand at high and

    Moving by left to right along demand curve D, then price elasticity of demand for cheesy fried grits of Pixie is mostly: (w) positive, then unitary, then negative. (x) constant and equivalent to one. (y) greater at high prices than at low prices. (z)

  • Q : Positively sloped long run industry

    A purely competitive industry produces a positively-sloped long-run industry supply curve when the industry: (i) includes only firms which experience diseconomies of scale. (ii) is an increasing cost industry. (iii) experiences technological advances