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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) addicts are irrational and do not consider the full costs of using addictive substances.
B) consumers weigh the benefits of using addictive substances along with their full costs.
C) standard economic models are not equipped to address socially destructive behavior.
D) prices play no role in the decisions to use addictive substances.
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Multiple Choice
A) increase over time.
B) exit the market over time or adjust their behaviors.
C) have a comparative advantage over their rational counterparts.
D) never enter markets and participate in them.
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Multiple Choice
A) phenomenon whereby simply possessing an item increases its value.
B) situation in which a consumer prefers avoiding economic losses to acquiring economic gains.
C) bias whereby a person places too much emphasis on the immediate future, ignoring the recent past.
D) bias whereby a person places too much emphasis on the immediate future, ignoring the distant future.
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Multiple Choice
A) sunk cost fallacy.
B) marginal comparison fallacy.
C) ceteris paribus fallacy.
D) harmonization conundrum.
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Multiple Choice
A) principle that sunk costs matter more and more with the passage of time.
B) mistaken belief that one should consider sunk costs when making decisions.
C) idea that people ignore experience when making future decisions.
D) correct belief that past investments can be recovered from future actions.
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A) biased by sunk costs.
B) economically rational.
C) biased by self-control problems.
D) the result of hyperbolic discounting.
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A) shoveling.
B) anchoring.
C) yanking.
D) fanning.
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Multiple Choice
A) consumers who use drugs are exhibiting irrational decision making.
B) addiction is most common among those earning six figure incomes.
C) consumers consider both the lifetime costs and benefits (utility) of addiction.
D) addiction cannot be classified as rational.
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Multiple Choice
A) unbiased loss-averse.
B) using real variables to make decisions.
C) loss-averse.
D) acutely loss-averse.
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Multiple Choice
A) I and III
B) I, II, and III
C) III
D) II
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Multiple Choice
A) Pigouvian conjecture.
B) lab experiment.
C) natural experiment.
D) path-dependent experiment.
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Multiple Choice
A) I, III, and IV
B) II
C) III and IV
D) I and II
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Multiple Choice
A) Mark paid $3,100 for a used car that he values at $4,000. Recently, Mark was offered $4,400 for the car but refuses to sell it.
B) Sammy receives increasing marginal utility as his 401K plan increases.
C) Toby prefers a guaranteed $200 to a gamble with an expected value of $200.
D) Deana refuses to transfer money from her checking account into her savings account, even though she has paid all her monthly bills.
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Multiple Choice
A) invalidates most of the standard economic models because it is difficult to account for irrational behavior.
B) suggests that people are even more rational and calculating than suggested by standard economic models.
C) concludes that, at least for durable goods, demand curves and supply curves both slope upward.
D) provides insights that can, in many cases, easily be accounted for by standard economic models.
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Multiple Choice
A) $120,000
B) $150,000
C) $100,000
D) any price less than $120,000
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