Exam 11: Public Goods and Common Resources
Exam 1: Ten Lessons From Economics149 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist147 Questions
Exam 3: Interdependence and the Gains From Trade153 Questions
Exam 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand222 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Application181 Questions
Exam 6: Supply, Demand and Government Policies148 Questions
Exam 7: Consumers, Producers and the Efficiency of Markets177 Questions
Exam 8: Application: The Costs of Taxation141 Questions
Exam 9: Application: International Trade161 Questions
Exam 10: Externalities199 Questions
Exam 11: Public Goods and Common Resources182 Questions
Exam 12: The Design of the Tax System154 Questions
Exam 13: The Costs of Production191 Questions
Exam 14: Firms in Competitive Markets200 Questions
Exam 15: Monopoly214 Questions
Exam 16: Business Strategy184 Questions
Exam 17: Competition Policy104 Questions
Exam 18: Monopolistic Competition214 Questions
Exam 19: The Markets for the Factors of Production215 Questions
Exam 20: Earnings, Unions and Discrimination206 Questions
Exam 21: Income Inequity and Poverty111 Questions
Exam 22: The Theory of Consumer Choice161 Questions
Exam 23: Frontiers of Microeconomics120 Questions
Exam 24: Measuring a Nations Income51 Questions
Exam 25: Measuring the Cost of Living52 Questions
Exam 26: Production and Growth62 Questions
Exam 27: Saving, Investment and the Financial System62 Questions
Exam 28: The Natural Rate of Unemployment59 Questions
Exam 29: The Monetary System66 Questions
Exam 30: Inflation: Its Causes and Costs74 Questions
Exam 31: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts68 Questions
Exam 32: A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy64 Questions
Exam 33: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply82 Questions
Exam 34: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand73 Questions
Exam 35: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment58 Questions
Exam 36: Five Debates Over Macroeconomic Policy38 Questions
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National defence is a classic example of a public good because:
(Multiple Choice)
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If it is common knowledge that a given national park has become overused, why might raising the entrance fee to the park NOT solve the problem of overcrowding?
(Multiple Choice)
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For both public goods and common resources, an externality arises because:
(Multiple Choice)
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Some goods can switch between being public goods and private goods, depending on the circumstances.
(True/False)
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A fireworks display is a rival good because one person's enjoyment of the fireworks does not reduce anyone else's enjoyment.
(True/False)
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Cost-benefit analysis can account for risk by adjusting benefits and costs by their probability of occurrence.
(True/False)
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Some advocates of anti-poverty programs claim that fighting poverty is a public good. Explain what these advocates mean by classifying charity as a public good. What does this have to do with the need for government intervention?
(Essay)
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Countries that have completely outlawed domestic elephant hunting are finally seeing elephant populations start to rise.
(True/False)
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Government needs only to point out which goods the private markets are failing to provide efficiently and then allow the private markets to correct themselves.
(True/False)
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Government policy is of little use for properly allocating those goods that do not have prices attached to them.
(True/False)
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International disputes over fish, led to three 'cod-wars' between Great Britain and Iceland in the 1970s.
(True/False)
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Roads can be considered either public goods or common resources, depending on how congested they are.
(True/False)
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The American alligator is no longer endangered and is farmed in several Southern US states. The Chinese alligator is highly endangered. Which species is a common resource and which species is more like a private good?
(Essay)
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In the Tragedy of the Commons, joint action among the individual citizens would be necessary to solve their common resource problem, if government does not intervene.
(True/False)
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One person's use of common resources does not reduce the enjoyment other people receive from the resource.
(True/False)
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Four friends decide to meet at a Chinese restaurant for dinner. They decide that each person will order an item from the menu and they will share all dishes. When the final bill for the meal comes, they decide that they will split the cost evenly among each of the people at the table. In this particular case, a Tragedy of the Commons problem is likely because:
(Multiple Choice)
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'What is common to many is taken least care of, for all men have greater regard for what is their own than for what they possess in common with others'. This statement is attributed to:
(Multiple Choice)
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