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Multiple Choice Quiz
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1
Present-aim rationality
A)insists that one's aims fit the prevailing social norms.
B)ignores possible motives like altruism, desire for justice and fidelity to principle.
C)takes aims as given exogenously and therefore these aims are not subject to critique.
D)eliminates unusual or bizarre behavior from economic consideration.
2
If Franny's utility function is U = f(Franny's income and Zooey's income), then
A)the rational self-interest assumption of behavior will not predict Franny's behavior in many cases.
B)altruistic behavior can be predicted.
C)present-aim rationality is the only feasible way to model her behavior.
D)all of these are true.
E)none of these are true.
3
Biologists have helped economists see that
A)self preservation, narrowly defined, is the only motive that preserves a species.
B)organism's tastes are arbitrarily given rather than formed in a contest of adaptation.
C)preferences depend on historical and developmental circumstances.
D)all organisms have the same basic strategic preferences.
4
The text case of Zooey and Franny illustrates that
A)preferences are interdependent in that someone may gain utility by seeing another’s welfare increase.
B)present aim rationality and the standard rational choice analysis are incompatible.
C)altruism is irrational.
D)all of these are true.
E)none of these are true.
5
This chapter argues that
A)present aim analysis assumes people have the same preferences.
B)people’s tastes must differ because we are created as different individuals.
C)biology uses the rational choice model successfully in its modeling work.
D)people’s tastes must differ because uniform tastes would expose a population to invasion by groups with competing strategies.
6
One assertion of this chapter is that
A)people are unable to hide their true preferences
B)people are skilled at disguising their feelings so that only their words matter.
C)egoistic tendencies invariably win out against altruistic ones.
D)preferences that appear non egoistic are nothing more than disguised egoism.
7
Noneqoistic motivations will payoff for people if they
A)are able to tell people about their motivations.
B)hold the motivations sincerely and are good judges of the character of others.
C)can keep them secret and practice them subtlety.
D)are willing to cheat on agreements at opportune times.
8
This chapter challenges the prevailing wisdom in NeoClassical economic modeling that
A)people’s preferences do not change since only income and prices change.
B)survival depends on one’s ability to effectively pursue self-interests.
C)emotions, commitments, and values do not significantly affect behavior.
D)all of these are true.
9
According to your text
A)people can fake positions well enough to get ahead in life as frauds.
B)people are willing to pay money in order to enforce their concept of fairness.
C)voting participation rates will likely continue to decline in the democratic world.
D)material gain is an inappropriate motive for morality.
10
Which of the following best explains why people who budget carefully tend to spend less money?
A)Bounded rationality
B)The asymmetric value function
C)Hedonic framing
D)Out of pocket costs versus opportunity costs
11
Which case best shows how marketing people use the asymmetric value function to their advantage.
A)They take full page adds on interior pages instead of half page adds on the front pages of sections.
B)They make a deal that is good only for one day rather than an indefinite period of time.
C)They bundle items together so the consumer must buy several things to get one item.
D)They give cash rebates rather than reduce the price of the item
12
If economists tend to be left-brained people, then
A)if you find a left-brained person and assume you have an economist, you are falling into the representative bias.
B)if you find an economist and assume you have a left-brained person, you are falling into the anchoring bias.
C)if a person is right-brained and an economist, he must have an asymmetric value function.
D)if a person is a right-brained economist, she will be more susceptible to the psychophysics of perception.
13
Karl is a senior faculty member who bought his house 20 years ago. His neighbor, Carlos, just joined the faculty and for a similar house has mortgage payments that are three times what Karl pays. Recently Carlos commented that life would be so much easier if he had housing costs as low as Karl. This comment illustrates the problem of
A)considering out-of-pocket costs as full opportunity costs.
B)an asymmetric value function.
C)judgmental heuristics and biases.
D)the psychophysics of perception.
14
Credit cards have reduced the pain of shopping, not only because they are convenient, but because
A)of the initially steep slope of the utility function for losses.
B)of the fact that credit card payments are not out of pocket loses.
C)people are risk averse.
D)the psychophysics of perception makes a $1000 bill seem small.
15
In the late 1990’s Sammy Sosa and Mark McGuire engaged in a dramatic home run race to beat each other and the all-time season record. Most sports writers felt that if the record did not fall in that year it might stand for a long time to come. Yet the die-hard fans expected another record breaking year the following year. Which of the following concepts would tend to back the sports writer’s view?
A)Psychophysics of perception.
B)Regression to the mean
C)Bias of representativeness
D)Sports writers are risk lovers
16
In my intermediate micro class the exams seem to get progressively more difficult for the students as the semester goes along. The material builds and the concepts become more complicated. Although I do not try to make the exams harder, I welcome this trend because students tend to be pleasantly surprised by their final course grade. What from this chapter would explain why they are surprised at how high a final grade they receive?
A)The concept of an asymmetric value function
B)The fact that earlier grades are sunk costs.
C)The idea of availability in memory as it relates to more recent events.
D)The fact that students are risk averse.
17
An asymmetric value function underlies which of the following behavior?
A)Buying most purchases with a credit card.
B)Wrapping three Christmas presents in one large box.
C)Mowing one’s own lawn instead of paying the neighbor boy $8 to mow it, but at the same time refusing to mow the other neighbor’s similar lawn for $20.
D)All of these examples illustrate asymmetrical value functions.
E)None of these illustrate asymmetrical value functions.
18
People often feel a sense of relief when they pay off their mortgage and have a debt free house. Which of the following is an accurate assessment of that feeling?
A)It is a false sense of relief because housing costs have not diminished at all.
B)It is a false sense of relief because the cash flow situation of the household budget has not improved at all.
C)It is a valid sense of relief because housing costs have fallen and the family is richer.
D)It is a valid sense of relief because it is always true that the less debt the better.
19
My daughter recently purchased a new car. There was the sticker price and the dealer discount. There also was a $1000 manufacturers discount and a student $400 discount, plus a zero percent finance charge for a 36 month loan. All the options were already included on the sticker as standard equipment. This practice takes advantage of the psychology of
A)sunk costs.
B)hedonic framing because of an asymmetric value system.
C)judgmental heuristics
D)anchoring and adjusting.
20
The psychophysics of perception would be a reason why most people
A)get upset only when bills come but not when the receipts come later.
B)overestimate loses and underestimate gains.
C)fail to ignore sunk cost in a decision.
D)get upset when the toll on the highway doubles to 50 cents but ignore the price increase of a round of golf which goes from $25 to $26.
21
Politicians might notice that 70% of those who enter a primary, including those unopposed, win the party nomination. Yet, in a two-person race, one can win only 50% of the time. If politicians keep surfacing because they first see the 70% figure, they are likely being influenced by
A)the psychophysics of perception.
B)the Anchoring and adjustment factor.
C)representativeness
D)an asymmetric value function.
22
One of the sad aspects of the terrorist attacks was the way many people of Middle East decent were treated after the tragedy. Since probably 100% of the terrorists were from the Middle East many people mistrusted thousands of other folks who came from that region originally. This mistake is most likely due to biases in judgment related to
A)availability.
B)anchoring and adjustment.
C)the psychophysics of perception.
D)representativeness
23
After playing 4 holes of golf without success I mysteriously rolled in a par. On the way to the next tee I calculated what my score would be if I pared the rest of the holes. I had fallen prey to the bias of
A)availability
B)representativeness
C)anchoring and adjustment
D)the psychophysics of perception.







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