Ask Question
8 October, 19:57

A friend of yours is considering two cell phone service providers. provider a charges $120 per month for the service regardless of the number of phone calls made. provider b does not have a fixed service fee but instead charges $1 per minute for calls. your friend's monthly demand for minutes of calling is given by the equation, where is the price of a minute.

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 8 October, 20:18
    0
    A. A=0 B=1

    b. A=150min B=100

    c. A=120 B=100

    d. A=150x3/2-120=105 B=100x2/2=100

    e. A, because of d.

    Surplus of consumer is the amount that he save because he can purchase a product for a price that is less than he would be willing to pay. For example he is willing to pay almost $3 for the first minute, but he can pay only $1 or zero, so $2 (resp. 3 $) are his surplus from the first minute.

    Graphically, his surplus is a area between his demand (wich is straight) and the line of price (straight parallel to x)

    So in A it is content of triangle [0; 3] [0; 0] [150; 0] (noted as [x; y], x=number of minutes; y price) and you have subtract $120 fix charge

    in B it is content of triangle [0; 3] [0; 1] [100; 1]
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “A friend of yours is considering two cell phone service providers. provider a charges $120 per month for the service regardless of the ...” in 📗 Mathematics if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers