Deck 16: Externalities, Public Goods, and Social Choice

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Assume a company has a cafeteria where it lets all its workers eat without making them pay up front. Instead, at the end of the month the total cost of eating at the company cafeteria is added up and divided by the total number of workers. This amount is then deducted from each worker's paycheck. Explain how this practice may lead to a negative externality.
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Oscar and Felix room together in an apartment in New York City. Oscar is very messy and Felix is obsessed with neatness. Felix cannot stand a messy apartment and is even willing to pay Oscar $50 per week for him to clean up after himself. Oscar hates to clean up so much that he is willing to pay Felix $30 per week to maintain his messy habits. If Felix has the right to a clean apartment explain why the apartment will be clean. If Oscar has the right to remain messy explain why the apartment will still be clean.
Question
Comment on the following statement: "Taxes on externality-producing activities are generally used to eliminate externalities."
Question
What is marginal social cost?
Question
What does it mean to internalize an externality?
Question
XYZ Corporation operates in a perfectly competitive market and is currently maximizing profit. To keep the firm's costs low, XYZ's managers have decided to dump waste in a nearby river. Explain why the level of output currently produced by XYZ is not efficient.
Question
List four sources of market failure.
Question
What is marginal damage cost?
Question
Fred enjoys smoking cigars, but cigar smoke makes his wife, Wilma, feel ill. Use a graph to show that Fred's consumption of cigars will be inefficient if he ignores the costs imposed on Wilma.
Question
What is marginal private cost?
Question
What is market failure?
Question
Give an example where a government subsidy can correct an externality. Explain how the subsidy would lead to a more efficient outcome.
Question
In an effort to clean up the amount of sulfates introduced into the atmosphere the government has ruled that all polluters install smoke stack scrubbers on their smoke stacks and mandated a pollution limit on the amount of sulfates per parts of air that may be legally emitted into the atmosphere. Suppose some of the polluters have found a more efficient way to eliminate the pollution. How will this discovery change the amount of sulfates emitted into the atmosphere?
Question
Use a graph to explain why a perfectly competitive firm will overproduce if a negative externality is present.
Question
Use a graph to explain how a tax can provide an incentive for a firm to produce a more efficient level of output.
Question
What is the largest problem associated with using a tax to correct for an externality? Explain.
Question
Provide an economic explanation for why government subsidization of child immunizations may lead to a more efficient outcome.
Question
List the five approaches used to solve the problem of externalities.
Question
Why would a firm continue to pollute even when it is fined (taxed) for doing so?
Question
Critically evaluate the following statement. "Automobile manufacturers continue to produce cars that are dangerous. Therefore the industry should be considered as a market failure and safety mandates should be imposed by the government to insure that all cars are completely safe."
Question
What do you believe is one of the chief criticisms of the Coase Theorem that render it useless in real-world situations.
Question
Comment on the following statement: "The Coase theorem implies that the contending parties will come to the efficient solution regardless of where rights are initially assigned."
Question
How does the selling of pollution rights lead to a more efficient outcome?
Question
Define marginal social cost. Draw a graph for a perfectly competitive firm that creates an external cost without considering this external cost in its decision making. The graph should include the firm's demand curve, marginal cost curve, and marginal social cost curve. On the graph, indicate the amount this firm will produce to maximize profits and the efficient level of output. If the government imposes a tax on this firm to force the firm to internalize the externality, indicate on the graph the correct amount of the tax. Explain the results of this tax. Explain why this solution may be difficult to implement.
Question
Dick has a dog (Spot) that likes to bark at night. Jane, who lives next door to Dick, must be at work every morning by six o'clock. Suppose that there is a noise ordinance that requires Dick to keep his dog quiet. Is there any Coase solution to this problem that does not involve calling the police? Explain.
Question
Why do you suppose that taxes are often used in place of effluent charges in order to combat pollution?
Question
Explain why imperfect information can lead to market failure. Explain how the market can solve the problem of imperfect information. Under what circumstances may it be more efficient for the government to produce information instead of relying on the market?
Question
What is the Coase theorem?
Question
Explain the Coase theorem. In order for the Coase theorem to be applicable, explain which three conditions must be satisfied. Give an example to show how the Coase theorem can be applied.
Question
Why does the absence of well-defined property rights serve as a stumbling block for the application of the Coase theorem?
Question
What are liability rules?
Question
Comment on the following statement. "Taxing externality-producing activities may not eliminate damages."
Question
In what way can liability rules lead to a more efficient outcome?
Question
What is a public good?
Question
Economists often refer to taxes, subsidies, legal rules, and public auctions as methods of indirect regulation. Explain what this means and what are its limitations.
Question
What three conditions must be satisfied in order for the Coase theorem to work?
Question
How do taxes work to reduce a negative externality? Explain in detail.
Question
What is an injunction?
Question
Dick has a dog (Spot) that likes to bark at night. Jane, who lives next door to Dick, must be at work every morning by six o'clock. Suppose that there is no noise ordinance that requires Dick to keep his dog quiet. Is there any Coase solution to this problem? Explain.
Question
Fred enjoys smoking cigars, but his wife Wilma feels ill whenever she is around cigar smoke. Use the Coase theorem to explain how this problem could be solved without government involvement.
Question
Why are public goods a source of market failure?
Question
What is the free-rider problem?
Question
How is the market demand for public goods derived?
Question
What is the drop-in-the-bucket problem?
Question
What is the optimal level of provision of a public good?
Question
Some states require that unions represent non-union workers who don't pay dues in their collective bargaining negotiations. Explain using economic logic how this might result in fewer unions than would otherwise be the case if these types of laws did not exist.
Question
The figures below represent the demand for a public good for two consumers, Tom and Jerry. Assuming that these are the only two buyers, draw a graph showing the market demand curve for this public good. The figures below represent the demand for a public good for two consumers, Tom and Jerry. Assuming that these are the only two buyers, draw a graph showing the market demand curve for this public good.  <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Question
Explain why cable television is not a pure private good.
Question
Explain why a freeway isn't always considered to be a pure public good.
Question
Give an example of a public good. Explain what characteristics make this good a public good.
Question
What does it mean for a good to be non-rival in consumption?
Question
What does it mean for a good to be nonexcludable?
Question
The online encyclopedia known as Wikipedia is an example of a public good that provides information. Explain why this good did not need to be provided by the government.
Question
Consider a large public university in which a chemistry lecture is usually attended by 300 students or so but with large amounts of available seats on any given day. Is this a pure public good? If not, why not? Is this good likely to be provided in an efficient manner if the professor is vigilant in making sure that only registered students attend? Explain.
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Deck 16: Externalities, Public Goods, and Social Choice
1
Assume a company has a cafeteria where it lets all its workers eat without making them pay up front. Instead, at the end of the month the total cost of eating at the company cafeteria is added up and divided by the total number of workers. This amount is then deducted from each worker's paycheck. Explain how this practice may lead to a negative externality.
Since each person faces a marginal cost of zero of dining of zero. This will lead many workers to eat more than they otherwise would if they faced the true cost of their meals. This could result in many of the workers overeating that may make for a less healthy workforce.
2
Oscar and Felix room together in an apartment in New York City. Oscar is very messy and Felix is obsessed with neatness. Felix cannot stand a messy apartment and is even willing to pay Oscar $50 per week for him to clean up after himself. Oscar hates to clean up so much that he is willing to pay Felix $30 per week to maintain his messy habits. If Felix has the right to a clean apartment explain why the apartment will be clean. If Oscar has the right to remain messy explain why the apartment will still be clean.
In either case the apartment will remain clean. If Felix has the right to cleanliness, Oscar may offer $40 but the offer is likely to be refused because he values cleanliness at $50. If Oscar has the right to be messy he will be willing to accept some payment between $30 and $50 from Felix to clean up after himself.
3
Comment on the following statement: "Taxes on externality-producing activities are generally used to eliminate externalities."
The statement is false. Taxes are used to force decision makers to consider the full costs of their actions. This does not mean that the decision maker will decide to stop the externality-producing activity but he will generally scale back the activity.
4
What is marginal social cost?
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5
What does it mean to internalize an externality?
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6
XYZ Corporation operates in a perfectly competitive market and is currently maximizing profit. To keep the firm's costs low, XYZ's managers have decided to dump waste in a nearby river. Explain why the level of output currently produced by XYZ is not efficient.
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7
List four sources of market failure.
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8
What is marginal damage cost?
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9
Fred enjoys smoking cigars, but cigar smoke makes his wife, Wilma, feel ill. Use a graph to show that Fred's consumption of cigars will be inefficient if he ignores the costs imposed on Wilma.
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10
What is marginal private cost?
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11
What is market failure?
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12
Give an example where a government subsidy can correct an externality. Explain how the subsidy would lead to a more efficient outcome.
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13
In an effort to clean up the amount of sulfates introduced into the atmosphere the government has ruled that all polluters install smoke stack scrubbers on their smoke stacks and mandated a pollution limit on the amount of sulfates per parts of air that may be legally emitted into the atmosphere. Suppose some of the polluters have found a more efficient way to eliminate the pollution. How will this discovery change the amount of sulfates emitted into the atmosphere?
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14
Use a graph to explain why a perfectly competitive firm will overproduce if a negative externality is present.
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15
Use a graph to explain how a tax can provide an incentive for a firm to produce a more efficient level of output.
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16
What is the largest problem associated with using a tax to correct for an externality? Explain.
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17
Provide an economic explanation for why government subsidization of child immunizations may lead to a more efficient outcome.
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18
List the five approaches used to solve the problem of externalities.
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19
Why would a firm continue to pollute even when it is fined (taxed) for doing so?
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20
Critically evaluate the following statement. "Automobile manufacturers continue to produce cars that are dangerous. Therefore the industry should be considered as a market failure and safety mandates should be imposed by the government to insure that all cars are completely safe."
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21
What do you believe is one of the chief criticisms of the Coase Theorem that render it useless in real-world situations.
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22
Comment on the following statement: "The Coase theorem implies that the contending parties will come to the efficient solution regardless of where rights are initially assigned."
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23
How does the selling of pollution rights lead to a more efficient outcome?
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24
Define marginal social cost. Draw a graph for a perfectly competitive firm that creates an external cost without considering this external cost in its decision making. The graph should include the firm's demand curve, marginal cost curve, and marginal social cost curve. On the graph, indicate the amount this firm will produce to maximize profits and the efficient level of output. If the government imposes a tax on this firm to force the firm to internalize the externality, indicate on the graph the correct amount of the tax. Explain the results of this tax. Explain why this solution may be difficult to implement.
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25
Dick has a dog (Spot) that likes to bark at night. Jane, who lives next door to Dick, must be at work every morning by six o'clock. Suppose that there is a noise ordinance that requires Dick to keep his dog quiet. Is there any Coase solution to this problem that does not involve calling the police? Explain.
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26
Why do you suppose that taxes are often used in place of effluent charges in order to combat pollution?
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27
Explain why imperfect information can lead to market failure. Explain how the market can solve the problem of imperfect information. Under what circumstances may it be more efficient for the government to produce information instead of relying on the market?
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28
What is the Coase theorem?
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29
Explain the Coase theorem. In order for the Coase theorem to be applicable, explain which three conditions must be satisfied. Give an example to show how the Coase theorem can be applied.
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30
Why does the absence of well-defined property rights serve as a stumbling block for the application of the Coase theorem?
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31
What are liability rules?
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32
Comment on the following statement. "Taxing externality-producing activities may not eliminate damages."
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33
In what way can liability rules lead to a more efficient outcome?
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34
What is a public good?
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35
Economists often refer to taxes, subsidies, legal rules, and public auctions as methods of indirect regulation. Explain what this means and what are its limitations.
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36
What three conditions must be satisfied in order for the Coase theorem to work?
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37
How do taxes work to reduce a negative externality? Explain in detail.
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38
What is an injunction?
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39
Dick has a dog (Spot) that likes to bark at night. Jane, who lives next door to Dick, must be at work every morning by six o'clock. Suppose that there is no noise ordinance that requires Dick to keep his dog quiet. Is there any Coase solution to this problem? Explain.
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40
Fred enjoys smoking cigars, but his wife Wilma feels ill whenever she is around cigar smoke. Use the Coase theorem to explain how this problem could be solved without government involvement.
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41
Why are public goods a source of market failure?
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42
What is the free-rider problem?
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43
How is the market demand for public goods derived?
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44
What is the drop-in-the-bucket problem?
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45
What is the optimal level of provision of a public good?
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46
Some states require that unions represent non-union workers who don't pay dues in their collective bargaining negotiations. Explain using economic logic how this might result in fewer unions than would otherwise be the case if these types of laws did not exist.
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47
The figures below represent the demand for a public good for two consumers, Tom and Jerry. Assuming that these are the only two buyers, draw a graph showing the market demand curve for this public good. The figures below represent the demand for a public good for two consumers, Tom and Jerry. Assuming that these are the only two buyers, draw a graph showing the market demand curve for this public good.
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48
Explain why cable television is not a pure private good.
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49
Explain why a freeway isn't always considered to be a pure public good.
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50
Give an example of a public good. Explain what characteristics make this good a public good.
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51
What does it mean for a good to be non-rival in consumption?
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52
What does it mean for a good to be nonexcludable?
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53
The online encyclopedia known as Wikipedia is an example of a public good that provides information. Explain why this good did not need to be provided by the government.
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54
Consider a large public university in which a chemistry lecture is usually attended by 300 students or so but with large amounts of available seats on any given day. Is this a pure public good? If not, why not? Is this good likely to be provided in an efficient manner if the professor is vigilant in making sure that only registered students attend? Explain.
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