In: Economics
You have seven mornings per week. On each morning, you can either study, go to the rock climbing wall, or sculpt (i.e., make sculptures). If you rock climb, you must be a member of the club. The membership fee is 100 Bobos each week. And, as member, you pay 10 Bobos for each morning of climbing. If you sculpt, you must rent a studio which costs 100 Bobos per month. Each morning you sculp, you use 10 Bobos worth of material.
Your economics professor has asked you to produce a table showing your marginal cost for each of 7 mornings you might sculpt during a normal week.
ble and why the values you wrote down make
sense. Provide your answers in sections labelled
The Table
The Explanation
Assume that in October, you rationally climbed two times per
week and sculpted three times per week. In November, you know that
the daily climbing price will be 5 bobo per morning. Explain, using
the costs and benefits of sculping, how you will decide whether to
rent
a studio in November. Provide your answer in a section
labelled
November
Assume that in March you rationally climbed two times per week
and sculpted three times per week. A climber from out of town is
willing to pay you 50 Bobos per week for your April membership. If
you sell, you cannot climb. If this is the only change the
professor is aware of, what does your economics professor predict
about how often you sculp in April? Explain. Provide your answer in
a section labelled
April
Assume that the following March, you rationally climbed two
times per week and sculpted three times per week. In April the
membership fee for the climbing club will increase 150 bobos per
week. If this is the only change the professor is aware of, what
does your economics professor predict about how often you sculp in
April? Explain. Provide your answer in a section labelled
April, redux