Suppose that, prior to the passage of the Truth in Lending Simplification Act an
ID: 1221472 • Letter: S
Question
Suppose that, prior to the passage of the Truth in Lending Simplification Act and Regulation Z, the demand for consumer loans was given by Qdpre-TILSA = 14 -90P (in billions of dollars) and the supply of consumer loans by credit unions and other lending institutions was QSpre-TILSA = 6 + 110P (in billions of dollars). The TILSA now requires lenders to provide consumers with complete information about the rights and responsibilities of entering into a lending relationship with the institution, and as a result, the demand for loans increased to Qdpost-TILSA = 22 -90P (in billions of dollars). However, the TILSA also imposed “compliance costs” on lending institutions, and this reduced the supply of consumer loans to QSpost-TILSA = 2 + 110P (in billions of dollars). Based on this information, compare the equilibrium price and quantity of consumer loans before and after the Truth in Lending Simplification Act.(Note: Q is measured in billions of dollars and P is the interest rate).
Instruction: Report your answers for the equilibrium price in percentage terms, and round all answers to one decimal place.
Equilibrium price (interest rate) before TILSA:______________ percent
Equilibrium quantity (in billions of dollars) before TILSA: $___________ billion
Equilibrium price (interest rate) after TILSA:____________ percent
Equilibrium quantity (in billions of dollars) after TILSA: $______________ billion
Explanation / Answer
Equilibrium price (interest rate) before TILSA:________4______ percent
Equilibrium quantity (in billions of dollars) before TILSA: $____10.4_______ billion
Equilibrium price (interest rate) after TILSA:____10________ percent
Equilibrium quantity (in billions of dollars) after TILSA: $______13________ billion
If you don't understand then comment. i'ill revert back on the same. :)
Related Questions
drjack9650@gmail.com
Navigate
Integrity-first tutoring: explanations and feedback only — we do not complete graded work. Learn more.