Exam 10: Externalities
Exam 1: Ten Principles of Economics218 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist239 Questions
Exam 3: Interdependence and the Gains From Trade207 Questions
Exam 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand351 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Application230 Questions
Exam 6: Supply, demand, and Government Policies248 Questions
Exam 7: Consumers, producers, and the Efficiency of Markets216 Questions
Exam 8: Application: the Costs of Taxation222 Questions
Exam 9: Application: International Trade182 Questions
Exam 10: Externalities210 Questions
Exam 11: Public Goods and Common Resources173 Questions
Exam 12: The Design of the Tax System200 Questions
Exam 13: The Costs of Production209 Questions
Exam 14: Firms in Competitive Markets261 Questions
Exam 15: Monopoly239 Questions
Exam 16: Monopolistic Competition191 Questions
Exam 17: Oligopoly198 Questions
Exam 18: The Markets for the Factors of Production180 Questions
Exam 19: Earnings and Discrimination167 Questions
Exam 20: Income Inequality and Poverty163 Questions
Exam 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice191 Questions
Exam 22: Frontiers of Microeconomics141 Questions
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Figure 10-1
This figure reflects the market for outdoor concerts in a public park surrounded by residential neighbourhoods.
-Refer to Figure 10-1.What is the total surplus derived from the most efficient outcome

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(Multiple Choice)
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What type of cost involved when employing a lawyer to draft and enforce a private contract between parties wishing to solve an externality problem
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D
Chad's maple tree hangs over Amy's fence and drops leaves into her yard each autumn.The benefit to Chad of lower utility bills is about $300.The cost to Amy of having her lawn cleaned and reseeded is $350.Based on the Coase theorem,what should result
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What is one reason private solutions to externalities do NOT always work
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If it is illegal for a biochemical manufacturer to release its waste into a nearby stream,what is this an example of
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Two firms,A and B,each currently dump 50 tonnes of chemicals into the local river.From now on both firms will require a pollution permit for each tonne of pollution dumped.The government gives each firm 20 tonnes' worth of pollution permits,which it can either use or sell to the other firm.It costs Firm A $100 for each tonne of pollution that it eliminates before it reaches the river,and it costs Firm B $50 for each tonne of pollution that it eliminates before it reaches the river.After the two firms buy or sell pollution permits from each other,what would we expect that Firm A and Firm B will dump
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The government can internalize an externality by taxing goods that have negative externalities and subsidizing goods that have positive externalities.
(True/False)
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When does the Coase theorem suggest that private markets may NOT be able to solve the problem of externalities
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When one firm sells its pollution permit to another firm,what will most likely occur
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If education produces positive externalities,what would we expect
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According to the Coase theorem,when will private markets solve externality problems and allocate resources efficiently
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Firms that can reduce pollution easily would be willing to sell their pollution permits.
(True/False)
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What term is used for a situation where one firm's research yields knowledge that is used by society as a whole
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