Exam 17: Externalities, the Environment, and Natural Resources
Exam 1: What Is Economics?227 Questions
Exam 2: The Economy: Myth and Reality150 Questions
Exam 3: The Fundamental Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice250 Questions
Exam 4: Supply and Demand: An Initial Look308 Questions
Exam 5: Consumer Choice: Individual and Market Demand202 Questions
Exam 6: Demand and Elasticity209 Questions
Exam 7: Production, Inputs, and Cost: Building Blocks for Supply Analysis216 Questions
Exam 8: Output, Price, and Profit: The Importance of Marginal Analysis189 Questions
Exam 9: Securities: Business Finance, and the Economy: The Tail that Wags the Dog?198 Questions
Exam 10: The Firm and the Industry under Perfect Competition208 Questions
Exam 11: Monopoly203 Questions
Exam 12: Between Competition and Monopoly225 Questions
Exam 13: Limiting Market Power: Regulation and Antitrust152 Questions
Exam 14: The Case for Free Markets I: The Price System220 Questions
Exam 15: The Shortcomings of Free Markets212 Questions
Exam 16: The Market's Prime Achievement: Innovation and Growth110 Questions
Exam 17: Externalities, the Environment, and Natural Resources217 Questions
Exam 18: Taxation and Resource Allocation219 Questions
Exam 19: Pricing the Factors of Production228 Questions
Exam 20: Labor and Entrepreneurship: The Human Inputs223 Questions
Exam 21: Poverty, Inequality, and Discrimination167 Questions
Exam 22: An Introduction to Macroeconomics211 Questions
Exam 23: The Goals of Macroeconomic Policy207 Questions
Exam 24: Economic Growth: Theory and Policy223 Questions
Exam 25: Aggregate Demand and the Powerful Consumer214 Questions
Exam 26: Demand-Side Equilibrium: Unemployment or Inflation?210 Questions
Exam 27: Bringing in the Supply Side: Unemployment and Inflation?223 Questions
Exam 28: Managing Aggregate Demand: Fiscal Policy205 Questions
Exam 29: Money and the Banking System219 Questions
Exam 30: Monetary Policy: Conventional and Unconventional205 Questions
Exam 31: The Financial Crisis and the Great Recession61 Questions
Exam 32: The Debate over Monetary and Fiscal Policy214 Questions
Exam 33: Budget Deficits in the Short and Long Run210 Questions
Exam 34: The Trade-Off between Inflation and Unemployment214 Questions
Exam 35: International Trade and Comparative Advantage226 Questions
Exam 36: The International Monetary System: Order or Disorder?213 Questions
Exam 37: Exchange Rates and the Macroeconomy214 Questions
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The invention of new mining methods will affect price through the supply side.
(True/False)
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Which of the following environmental approaches is most appropriate when surveillance and enforcement is impractical?
(Multiple Choice)
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Increased concern about environmental problems derive partly from
(Multiple Choice)
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Dwindling resources encourage the development of substitute products.
(True/False)
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In contrast to the need for legal enforcement under a system of direct controls, a taxes approach
(Multiple Choice)
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The price of a depletable natural resource last year rose more than expected.The most likely explanation is that
(Multiple Choice)
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If suppliers of garbage collection services charged the full costs of providing the service, the supply curve would
(Multiple Choice)
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There has been a downward trend in the United States since 1980 in the ambient concentrations of
(Multiple Choice)
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Economists generally consider the use of taxes as the most efficient way of solving pollution problems.
(True/False)
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Externalities are benefits or damages conferred upon people who are directly involved in an exchange of a good or service.
(True/False)
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Interest in environmental problems has intensified, perhaps because
(Multiple Choice)
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Defects in the sale of "pollution licenses" as a means of controlling emissions are present because: (i) the scheme is undermined by inflation; (ii) there is a lack of political appeal.
(Multiple Choice)
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Why is it misleading to argue that emissions permits are a "license to pollute"?
(Essay)
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Americans are creating an enormous amount of solid waste daily-over 4 pounds per person per day.How is the United States coping with this extraordinary problem?
(Essay)
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Direct controls are considered inefficient because all firms are forced to pay the same costs.
(True/False)
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