--%>

Various close substitutes and little complements

The demand for an exact good tends to be relatively more price elastic when the good: (1) has various close substitutes and very little complements. (2) is taken as a necessity in place of a luxury. (3) is an inferior good. (4) is relatively income elastic into demand. (5) has no close substitutes and many costly complements.

Hello guys I want your advice. Please recommend some views for above Economics problems.

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Relative Income Measures and

    After adjusting income for taxes and transfers, affects that would be least responsible for the reducing percentages of the U.S. population classified like “middle relative income” from 1976 is probably: (

  • Q : Utility Analysis problem The marginal

    The marginal utility curve can much loosely be translated into the demand curve by: (1) Measuring its declining part in dollars. (2) Transforming utils into the prices. (3) Horizontally summing up everyone’s MUs at each and every price. (4) Setting MUa/Pa = MUb/

  • Q : Expectations in market demands for

    Present market demands for most of the durable goods tend to rise if: (1) Their prices are predicted to rise in the near future. (2) Consumers expect growth in supplies of substitutes. (3) Technological advances make present models obsolete. (4) The p

  • Q : Estimate price by price elasticity of

    At the point on the demand curve for RoboMaids where the price elasticity of demand is unitary, the price would be roughly: (i) $10,000, resulting in sales of roughly 16,000 robots monthly. (ii) $13,000, resulting in sales of approxim

  • Q : Problem on relative monetary values The

    The relative monetary values an individual consumer subjectively puts on containing a bit more or less of a good are termed as: (i) Consumer preferences. (ii) Demand prices. (iii) Psychic prices. (iv) Subliminal prices. (v) Consumer utilities.

  • Q : Income of consumer-consequence on

    Income of consumer: In case of normal good - Increase in income leads to rise in quantity demanded of a normal good and reduce in income leads to reduction in quanti

  • Q : Determine equilibrium by Price Ceilings

    Between the predictable results while government sets a maximum price below equilibrium are: (1) shortages. (2) queues. (3) black markets and corruption. (4) economic inefficiency. (5) All of the above.

    Q : Individual firm in purely competitive

    In a purely competitive industry, the individual firm: (i) can raise the quantity demanded by lowering the price of its product. (ii) experiences substantial economies of scale. (iii) faces a completely inelastic demand curve. (iv) cannot influence th

  • Q : Cross-elasticity coefficient When the

    When the number of textbooks sold falls/drops 10 percent whenever college tuitions double, textbooks and college enrollments are _____ goods and their cross-elasticity coefficient is mainly _____. (i) Superior; 5.0. (ii) Inferior;   10.0. (i

  • Q : Price of input influencing goods supply

    Elucidate how does change in price of input influence the supply of a good.