Exam 11: Public Goods and Common Resources.
Exam 1: Ten Principles of Economics.349 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist.535 Questions
Exam 3: Interdependence and the Gains from Trade.443 Questions
Exam 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand.571 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Application510 Questions
Exam 6: Supply, Demand, And Government Policies.557 Questions
Exam 7: Consumers, Producers, and the Efficiency of Markets.460 Questions
Exam 8: Application: The Costs of Taxation.424 Questions
Exam 9: Application: International Trade.410 Questions
Exam 10: Externalities.441 Questions
Exam 11: Public Goods and Common Resources.349 Questions
Exam 12: The Design of the Tax System.478 Questions
Exam 13: The Costs of Production.533 Questions
Exam 14: Firms in Competitive Markets.478 Questions
Exam 15: Monopoly.526 Questions
Exam 16: Monopolistic Competition.497 Questions
Exam 17: Oligopoly.410 Questions
Exam 18: The Market For the Factors of Production.463 Questions
Exam 19: Earnings and Discrimination.398 Questions
Exam 20: Income Inequality and Poverty.374 Questions
Exam 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice.462 Questions
Exam 22: Frontiers in Microeconomics.353 Questions
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Advocates of antipoverty programs claim that fighting poverty is a public good.
(True/False)
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Table 11-2
Consider a small town with only three families, the Johnson family, the Marshall family, and the Walker family. The town does not currently have any streetlights so it is very dark at night. The three families are considering putting in streetlights on Main Street and are trying to determine how many lights to install. The table below shows each family's willingness to pay for each streetlight.
-Refer to Table 11-2.Suppose the cost to install each streetlight is $300 and the families have agreed to split the cost of installing the streetlights equally.To maximize their own surplus,how many streetlights would the Marshall's like the town to install?

(Multiple Choice)
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Figure 11-1
-Refer to Figure 11-1.The box labeled D represents

(Multiple Choice)
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You are the mayor of a town with 20,000 residents.The head of your economic development agency recently conducted a survey in which the 20,000 residents said that a small public library in the center of town would be worth $40 to each of them.Because the cost to build the library is only $500,000,you arrange to have the library built.Everyone in town enjoys the library,but when you asked for donations to pay for the library,you only collected $100,000.You are convinced that
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Most goods in our economy are allocated in markets,where buyers pay for what they receive and sellers are paid for what they provide.
(True/False)
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Table 11-4
There are four homes along Belmont Circle, which surrounds a small plot of land. The land currently has no trees, and the 4 homeowners -- Adams, Benitez, Chen, and Davis -- are considering the idea of contributing to a pool of money that will be used to plant up to 4 trees. The table represents their willingness to pay, that is, the maximum amount that each homeowner is willing to contribute toward each tree.
-Refer to Table 11-4.Suppose the cost to plant each tree is $120 and the 4 homeowners have agreed to split all tree-planting costs equally.How many trees would Adams prefer to plant?

(Multiple Choice)
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The Pennsylvania Turnpike is a tolled freeway running through the state of Pennsylvania.Motorists must pay tolls at various points along the Turnpike based on the distance they traveled on the freeway.Suppose that despite the tolls,many motorists in the urban areas use the Turnpike causing traffic to slow during peak times.What type of good would the Turnpike be classified as in this case?
(Multiple Choice)
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Markets may fail to allocate resources efficiently when property rights are not well established.
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Which of the following goods is rival in consumption and excludable?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which city currently charges drivers a "congestion toll" to drive into the heart of the city's financial,legal,and entertainment district?
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One proposed solution to overused,deteriorating national parks would be to
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Figure 11-1
-Refer to Figure 11-1.Once good x is provided,policymakers need to be concerned about how much of it is used.Good x is an example of the type of good represented by Box

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The local fire department wants to buy some new equipment at a cost of $300,000.If a human life is worth $10 million,the equipment is worth buying if it reduces the risk of someone dying in a fire over the life of the equipment by at least
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A view of a spectacular sunset along a private beach is an example of a
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