Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
Administrator
775 posts
|
1. (b)
2. (d) 3. (c) 4. (b) 5. (d) 6. (c) 7. (a) 8. (c) 9. (a) 10. (c) 11. (d) 12. (c) 13. (b) 14. (d) 15. (c) 16. (c) 17. (b) 18. (a) 19. (a) 20. (d) 21. (d) 22. (b) 23. (b) 24. (b) 25. (a) 26. (d) 27. (a) 28. (b) 29. (b) 30. (d) Ref: MSQE 2015 |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
82 posts
|
Onionknight, you were correct of about the square matrix of matrix (Q.5). Rest of the answers are same.
Amit sir can you please help in Q.2 of ISI PEB 2015. Should we take bribe as the price in demand equation or divide consumers' surplus by the quantity to get bribe/connection. |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
39 posts
|
In reply to this post by Amit Goyal
sir plz explain question no. 1 nd 5 from 2012 peb paper
|
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
206 posts
|
Q1.) In the short run, K is fixed as K* so the only decision the firm needs to make is how much labour to employ. Whatever labour the firm employs, the production function is Y= L^0.25 * K^0.25 and since capital is fixed as K*, L^0.25 = Y/K^0.25 which means L= Y^4/K. Now cost in the short run is wage rate times labour which is 10*Y^4/K.
In the long run, to maximize profits, set marginal derivative of profit with respect to labour=0, which gives 0.25*p*L^-0.25*K^0.25 = 10 Similarly, set marginal derivative of profit with respect to capital =0 0.25*p*K^-0.25*L^0.25 = 10 Divide the two equations to get K=L Now K^0.25 * L^0.25 = Y, L and K are equal so L=K= Y^2 cost= w*L+r*K = 20*Y^2 |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
206 posts
|
In reply to this post by deepti
This image shows the budget set of the consumers and also their allotments and their final chosen sets : http://s28.postimg.org/cnt5m6kfx/20150503_203428.jpg. Yes, they can have the same preferences since there is nothing that suggests otherwise. For instance, both of them could have their bliss point for consumption of y at y=15 and spend all the money left on x.
|
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
39 posts
|
Thanks it ws really helpful.. plz tell me the ans of question no. 6 from 2012 paper
|
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
57 posts
|
why is and to q20 d and not b
also in q19 if m =.2 and p=.1 x*=2 or m=2 and p=1 x*=0 so shouldnt ans be option C instead of A |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
26 posts
|
In reply to this post by Amit Goyal
Keep this post for 2015 discussions only.
please |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
82 posts
|
Any body who have solved question 7 , 21 and 27. Please explain those.
|
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
112 posts
|
For q.7 put x+2y = a and x-2y = b
solve these simultaneous equations to get x and y in terms of a and b. This will give you f(a,b) Q.21 P(A intersection B) may be zero or non-zero => P(A|B) may be zero or non-zero. If it is zero, it is definitely < P(A) because P(A) is non-zero ALWAYS. Similar argument can be made for P(A|B)<P(B) (only those times when P(A|B) = 0) so a,c can be ruled out. now, P(A) = P(A|B) + P(A|B') => P(A|B) = P(A) - P(A|B') which obviously is =<P(A) P(A|B) will be equal to P(A) if P(A|B') = 0. This can happen when A and B are mutually exclusive exhaustive events. So, we cannot be sure that P(A|B) will only be 'LESS' than P(A) always. They can also be equal Hope this helps ! |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
39 posts
|
So d should be the final ans.?? Of question 21 On May 6, 2015 7:40 AM, "Rajat [via Discussion forum]" <[hidden email]> wrote:
For q.7 put x+2y = a and x-2y = b ... [show rest of quote] |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
82 posts
|
Thanks a lot @rajat. N please explain the 27th ques as well.
For w in the 1st draw , shudnt the prob be w/(w+b) * b/(w+b-1) and the same in the second draw as well |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
79 posts
|
In reply to this post by Amit Goyal
A matrix is said to be zero matrix or null matrix if all its elements are zero.
Hence, answer of 5 should be a. Copied and pasted above line from NCERT. |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
82 posts
|
hi dhruv, the correct answer is d only. The ques is asking about the square of this matrix not the given matrix.
|
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
79 posts
|
Yeah, you are right.
Also, have you tried ISI PEB 2015, compared to previous sample papers, I found it really hard. |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
206 posts
|
It was but then again, solving 2-3 questions *correctly* was good enough to get you an interview call last year, from what I've heard (I didn't give the test myself).
|
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
82 posts
|
In reply to this post by dhruv
Arey I filed an RTI regarding the cut offs. The cut off for 2014 PEB was 31 and PEA 83. As rightly said by onion , if the paper is tough cut off will go down for sure.
|
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
39 posts
|
Can anyone hlp me wid the solow model questions from peb 2015 On May 7, 2015 7:24 PM, "[hidden email] [via Discussion forum]" <[hidden email]> wrote:
Arey I filed an RTI regarding the cut offs. The cut off for 2014 PEB was 31 and PEA 83. As rightly said by onion , if the paper is tough cut off will go down for sure. |
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
39 posts
|
In reply to this post by mittar.chardikala@gmail.com
Question no. 7th n 8th On May 7, 2015 8:18 PM, "deepti sharma" <[hidden email]> wrote:
|
Loading... |
Reply to author |
Edit post |
Move post |
Delete this post |
Delete this post and replies |
Change post date |
Print post |
Permalink |
Raw mail |
206 posts
|
In reply to this post by mittar.chardikala@gmail.com
What is the marking scheme like for PEA?
|
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |