Chapter 2: Consumer Behaviour and Demand (Set-4)

Consumer surplus refers to

A Difference between total utility and total expenditure
B Excess of price over willingness to pay
C Total utility from consumption
D Total satisfaction at equilibrium

The concept of consumer surplus was introduced by

A Alfred Marshall
B J.R. Hicks
C Paul Samuelson
D Lionel Robbins

Consumer surplus arises because

A Price is greater than utility
B Marginal utility declines
C Demand is perfectly elastic
D Income is constant

Consumer surplus can be measured in terms of

A Price only
B Utility only
C Money
D Income

According to Marshall, consumer surplus equals

A Price × Quantity
B Total utility – Total expenditure
C Marginal utility – Price
D Income – Expenditure

Consumer surplus is maximum when

A Price is maximum
B Price is zero
C Marginal utility is zero
D Income is zero

Consumer surplus is zero when

A Price is zero
B Marginal utility is zero
C Total utility equals total expenditure
D Demand is perfectly elastic

Consumer surplus depends directly on

A Cost of production
B Marginal utility
C Price elasticity
D Income elasticity

A fall in price of a commodity leads to

A Decrease in consumer surplus
B No change in consumer surplus
C Increase in consumer surplus
D Negative consumer surplus

Consumer surplus is greater when demand is

A Inelastic
B Elastic
C Perfectly elastic
D Unitary elastic

Consumer surplus is minimal when demand is

A Perfectly elastic
B Inelastic
C Unitary elastic
D Perfectly inelastic

The graphical representation of consumer surplus is the area

A Below demand curve and above price line
B Above demand curve
C Below price line
D Under supply curve

Consumer surplus is useful to government mainly in

A Price fixation
B Taxation policy
C Production planning
D Wage determination

The concept of consumer surplus helps in measuring

A Producer efficiency
B Social welfare
C Cost of production
D Market supply

Consumer surplus analysis assumes

A Ordinal utility
B Constant marginal utility of money
C Perfect competition only
D Variable income

Consumer surplus is high for

A Luxury goods
B Necessaries
C Inferior goods
D Free goods

Which factor reduces consumer surplus?

A Fall in price
B Rise in income
C Increase in price
D Increase in demand

Consumer surplus becomes negative when

A Price < willingness to pay
B Price > willingness to pay
C Marginal utility is zero
D Income is constant

Which situation gives zero consumer surplus?

A Perfectly elastic demand
B Inelastic demand
C Elastic demand
D Unitary elastic demand

Consumer surplus is applicable mainly under

A Monopoly
B Perfect competition
C Oligopoly
D Monopolistic competition

Which of the following increases consumer surplus?

A Tax on commodity
B Subsidy on commodity
C Rise in price
D Fall in income

The consumer surplus concept is criticised because it assumes

A Ordinal utility
B Constant MU of money
C Rational consumer
D Diminishing MU

Hicks criticised Marshall’s consumer surplus because utility is

A Cardinal
B Objective
C Subjective
D Monetary

According to Hicks, consumer surplus is measured using

A Marginal utility
B Indifference curves
C Total expenditure
D Price elasticity

Hicksian consumer surplus is more realistic because it

A Uses utils
B Avoids monetary measurement of utility
C Assumes constant MU of money
D Ignores preferences

Which surplus measures gain to producers?

A Consumer surplus
B Total surplus
C Producer surplus
D Social surplus

Total surplus in a market equals

A Consumer surplus only
B Producer surplus only
C Consumer surplus + Producer surplus
D Profit + cost

Consumer surplus is higher when

A Demand is perfectly elastic
B Demand is perfectly inelastic
C Demand is unitary elastic
D Demand is downward sloping

Which policy measure reduces consumer surplus but may raise government revenue?

A Subsidy
B Price ceiling
C Indirect tax
D Free distribution

Consumer surplus helps in evaluating

A Inflation rate
B Welfare impact of price changes
C GDP growth
D Employment level

Consumer surplus is insignificant when goods are

A Necessaries
B Luxuries
C Comforts
D Perfect substitutes

The greater the elasticity of demand, the

A Greater the consumer surplus
B Smaller the consumer surplus
C Zero consumer surplus
D Negative consumer surplus

Consumer surplus is widely used in

A Welfare economics
B Production theory
C Cost theory
D Growth theory

Consumer surplus exists because

A Consumers are irrational
B Price is constant
C Willingness to pay differs among units
D Income is unlimited

Consumer surplus is affected by

A Changes in taste
B Changes in income
C Changes in price
D All of the above

Which assumption makes consumer surplus less realistic?

A Rational consumer
B Diminishing MU
C Constant MU of money
D Stable preferences

Consumer surplus under perfectly competitive market is

A Zero
B Maximum
C Negative
D Constant

Consumer surplus helps in comparing

A Two demand curves
B Welfare before and after policy
C Cost structures
D Supply conditions

Which good generally gives maximum consumer surplus?

A Luxury goods
B Inferior goods
C Necessaries
D Comfort goods

Consumer surplus concept assumes

A Perfect knowledge of market
B Imperfect competition
C Price discrimination
D Monopoly power

A rise in indirect tax will

A Increase consumer surplus
B Reduce consumer surplus
C Not affect consumer surplus
D Eliminate surplus

Consumer surplus analysis is most useful in

A Short run only
B Long run only
C Partial equilibrium analysis
D General equilibrium analysis

Which curve is used to measure consumer surplus graphically?

A Supply curve
B Indifference curve
C Demand curve
D Cost curve

Consumer surplus is unaffected when

A Price changes
B Income changes
C Preferences change
D Quantity demanded remains zero

Consumer surplus concept ignores

A Psychological satisfaction
B Monetary measurement
C Producer welfare
D Social welfare

Consumer surplus is smallest for

A Essential goods
B Comfort goods
C Luxury goods
D Inferior goods

Consumer surplus analysis assumes demand curve reflects

A Marginal cost
B Marginal utility
C Average cost
D Average utility

Which situation increases consumer surplus the most?

A Rise in price
B Fall in price
C Increase in tax
D Reduction in income

Consumer surplus is widely used to justify

A Price rise
B Monopoly pricing
C Public subsidies
D Wage cuts

Consumer surplus ultimately measures

A Profit
B Cost
C Consumer welfare
D National income