Deck 11: Public Goods and Common Resources

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Question
A good that is rival in consumption is one that someone can be prevented from using if she did not pay for it.
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Question
Free goods are usually efficiently allocated without government intervention.
Question
Most goods in our economy are allocated in markets, where buyers pay for what they receive and sellers are paid for what they provide.
Question
Concerts in arenas are not excludable because it is virtually impossible to prevent someone from seeing the show.
Question
Government intervention cannot improve the allocation of resources for goods that do not have prices attached to them.
Question
Some goods can be classified as either public goods or private goods depending on the circumstances.
Question
When one person enjoys the benefit of a tornado siren, she reduces the benefit to others.
Question
You and your friends eat potato chips in your bedroom. For you and your friends, the potato chips are rival in consumption.
Question
Private goods and club goods have in common that they are excludable, but are different in that private goods are rival while club goods are not rival in consumption.
Question
A good that is excludable is one that someone can be prevented from using if she did not pay for it.
Question
Common resources and public goods have in common that they are not excludable and they are not rival in consumption.
Question
All goods that are excludable are also rival in consumption, but not all goods that are rival in consumption are excludable.
Question
You and your friends watch a movie in your bedroom. For you and your friends, the enjoyment that you get from watching the movie is not rival in consumption.
Question
When goods are available free of charge, the market forces that normally allocate resources in our economy are absent.
Question
Roads can be considered either public goods or common resources, depending on how congested they are.
Question
A free-rider is someone who receives the benefit of a good but avoids paying for it.
Question
A free rider is a person who pays for a good but does not receive the benefit of it.
Question
National Public Radio would be considered a club good.
Question
A good that is excludable but not rival is known as a club good.
Question
A pair of jeans is rival but non-excludable.
Question
When free riders are present in a market, the market generally fails to provide the efficient outcome.
Question
One benefit of the patent system is that it encourages the production of technical knowledge.
Question
Aristotle writes, "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." In this statement, Aristotle is referring to the free-rider problem that occurs when a person receives the benefit of a good without paying for it.
Question
The free-rider problem arises when the number of beneficiaries is large and exclusion of any of them is impossible.
Question
Some goods, such as lighthouses, can switch between being public goods and being private goods depending on the circumstances.
Question
Because the benefits of basic research are obvious and easy to measure, it is likely that the public sector pays for the right amount and the right kinds of basic research.
Question
A study that compares the costs and benefits to society of providing a public good is called externality analysis.
Question
London drivers who choose to drive in "congestion zones" pay a tax designed to reduce traffic congestion.
Question
One solution to the "Tragedy of the Commons" is to turn the common resource into a private good.
Question
Even economists who advocate small government agree that national defense is a good that the government should provide.
Question
Private markets usually provide lighthouses because ship captains have the incentive to navigate using the lighthouse and therefore will pay for the service.
Question
In determining whether and how much of a public good to provide, cost-benefits analysts use the same type of price signals for public goods as are readily available for private goods.
Question
An example of the "Tragedy of the Commons" is litter in the picnic area of a local park.
Question
Economists argue that we can calculate the value of a human life by observing voluntary risks that people take every day.
Question
The free-rider problem makes it unlikely that poverty will be entirely eliminated through private charity.
Question
Advocates of antipoverty programs claim that fighting poverty is a public good.
Question
Government agencies, such as the National Science Foundation, subsidize basic research because in the absence of a subsidy too little research would be conducted.
Question
Although national defense is currently a public good, economists who advocate small government generally agree that the U.S. should privatize national defense to increase the efficiency of the good.
Question
If we can conclude that human life has a finite value, cost-benefit analysis can lead to solutions in which human life is worth less than the cost of a potential project.
Question
In some cases the government can make everyone better off by raising taxes to pay for certain goods that the market fails to provide.
Question
Property rights are well established for

A)private goods.
B)public goods.
C)common resources.
D)both (b) and (c).
Question
Markets do not ensure that the air we breathe is clean because

A)clean air has no value.
B)the government prevents markets from doing so.
C)property rights are not well established for clean air.
D)clean air is impossible to produce .
Question
Depending on congestion, national parks can be either a common resource or a public good.
Question
Nontoll roads can be either public goods or common resources, depending upon the degree of congestion.
Question
In the Tragedy of the Commons, joint action among the individual citizens would be necessary to solve their common resource problem unless the government intervenes.
Question
Tolls are not effective in altering people's incentives to drive during rush hour.
Question
The pollution market failure is an example of the free rider problem.
Question
If Dave and Jesse are the only two fishermen in town and neither is bothered by the other's fishing, the lake they fish in is not a common resource.
Question
When a highway is congested, giving rise to negative externalities, it is appropriate to view the highway as a common resource.
Question
Consider the following problems: overcrowded public highways, overfishing in the ocean, polluted air, and the near-extinction of the wild rhinoceros. What do these problems have in common?

A)Private markets could easily solve them if governments left the markets alone.
B)They would all go away if the government sponsored an intensive public-information campaign.
C)They are all the result of a failure to establish clear property rights over something of value.
D)They are all the result of a failure of corrective taxes.
Question
One possible solution to the problem of protecting a common resource is to convert that resource to a private good.
Question
Table 11-6
Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning. Table 11-6 Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning.   ​ ​ ​Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $8 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. The number of cleaning hours that maximizes total surplus of Widgetapolis is 7 hours.<div style=padding-top: 35px>

​Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $8 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. The number of cleaning hours that maximizes total surplus of Widgetapolis is 7 hours.
Question
The profit motive that stems from private ownership means that elephant populations are best protected as common resources.
Question
Table 11-6
Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning. Table 11-6 Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning.   ​ ​ Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $32 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. It would maximize Lydia's surplus if 6 hours of cleaning is done.​<div style=padding-top: 35px>

Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $32 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. It would maximize Lydia's surplus if 6 hours of cleaning is done.​
Question
Markets may fail to allocate resources efficiently when property rights are not well established.
Question
Pollution is a negative externality, but it is not appropriate to view the problem of pollution as a common-resource problem.
Question
One person's use of common resources does not reduce the enjoyment other people receive from the resource.
Question
Governments that chose to make endangered elephants private goods have met with more success protecting elephants than governments that chose to make killing elephants illegal.
Question
A traffic light would be considered a common resource.
Question
Table 11-6
Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning. Table 11-6 Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning.   ​ ​ Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $32 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. It would maximize Mary's surplus if 3 hours of cleaning is done.​<div style=padding-top: 35px>

Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $32 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. It would maximize Mary's surplus if 3 hours of cleaning is done.​
Question
Which of the following represents a potential solution to the problem of environmental pollution?

A)corrective taxes
B)well established property rights
C)government regulation
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Which of the following statements is correct?

A)Environmental degradation is an example of a free rider problem..
B)The division between public goods and common resources is clear-cut.
C)Some goods, such as lighthouses, may be either private or public goods.
D)The free-rider problem prevents governments from supplying public goods.
Question
It would always be a mistake to view

A)many species of animals as common resources.
B)a road as a public good.
C)national defense as a common resource.
D)a fireworks display as a public good.
Question
Markets fail to allocate resources efficiently when

A)demanders and suppliers cannot agree on a price.
B)goods are rival in consumption and excludable.
C)property rights are not well established.
D)too many buyers and sellers exist in the same market.
Question
When the absence of property rights causes a market failure, the government can potentially solve the problem

A)by clearly defining property rights.
B)through regulation.
C)by supplying the good itself.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Which of the following is not a common resource?

A)clean air
B)clean water
C)open grazing land
D)national defense
Question
A textbook is a

A)private good and the knowledge that one gains from reading the book is a common resource.
B)private good and the knowledge that one gains from reading the book is a public good.
C)common resource and the knowledge that one gains from reading the book is a public good.
D)common resource and the knowledge that one gains from reading the book is a private good.
Question
It would always be a mistake to view

A)a streetlight as a common resource.
B)a nontoll road as a public good.
C)the environment as a common resource.
D)a lighthouse as a public good.
Question
If the use of a common resource is not regulated,

A)no one can enjoy it.
B)it will tend to be underused.
C)property rights will be clearly defined.
D)it will be overused.
Question
In which of the following examples are property rights not well established?

A)Carmen smokes a cigarette outside the door to her office building.
B)Carlita stocks shelves in a grocery store.
C)Cameron watches a movie in his home theater room.
D)Cathy docks her boat at her lake house.
Question
A common theme among examples of market failure is

A)the good being provided harms society in some systematic way.
B)some item of value does not have an owner with the legal authority to control it.
C)cost-benefit analysis will show that private markets should provide the goods and services.
D)government intervention decreases the social benefits.
Question
Which of the following statements is not correct?

A)Common resources are rival in consumption but are not excludable.
B)Uncongested toll roads are examples of club goods.
C)When African elephants were privatized, the survival of the species deteriorated.
D)National defense is not rival in consumption, nor is it excludable.
Question
When property rights are not well established,

A)private goods become public goods.
B)markets fail to allocate resources efficiently.
C)the distribution of private goods is unfair.
D)government resources are used inefficiently.
Question
Governments can grant private property rights over resources that were previously viewed as public, such as fish or elephants. Why would governments want to do so?

A)to prevent overuse
B)to decrease taxes
C)to fight poverty
D)to increase consumption
Question
Which of the following is not a way for the government to solve the problem of excessive use of common resources?

A)regulation
B)taxes
C)turning the common resource into a public good
D)turning the common resource into a private good
Question
Each of the following would be considered a common resource except a

A)water reservoir.
B)streetlight.
C)a congested road.
D)book from a public library.
Question
Neither public goods nor common resources are

A)excludable, but only public goods are not rival in consumption.
B)excludable, but only common resources are not rival in consumption.
C)rival in consumption, but only public goods are not excludable.
D)rival in consumption, but only common resources are not excludable.
Question
Which of the following statements is correct?

A)The establishment of property rights sometimes gives rise to market failure.
B)The absence of property rights sometimes gives rise to market failure.
C)In the context of public goods, the Coase theorem implies that total surplus in some markets can be improved by the elimination of property rights.
D)Government regulation of private behavior, in response to market failure, can never improve social well-being.
Question
Four roommates share an off-campus house and equally share the cost of rent. Everyone says that she values a clean house, yet the house is usually dirty. To an economist, a clean house in this case represents

A)a common resource problem.
B)a public good.
C)a club good.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Which of the following is not a common resource?

A)elephants in the wild
B)a narrow trail in a park
C)a neighborhood garden
D)Neither a nor b is a common resource.
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Deck 11: Public Goods and Common Resources
1
A good that is rival in consumption is one that someone can be prevented from using if she did not pay for it.
False
2
Free goods are usually efficiently allocated without government intervention.
False
3
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
4
Concerts in arenas are not excludable because it is virtually impossible to prevent someone from seeing the show.
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5
Government intervention cannot improve the allocation of resources for goods that do not have prices attached to them.
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6
Some goods can be classified as either public goods or private goods depending on the circumstances.
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7
When one person enjoys the benefit of a tornado siren, she reduces the benefit to others.
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8
You and your friends eat potato chips in your bedroom. For you and your friends, the potato chips are rival in consumption.
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9
Private goods and club goods have in common that they are excludable, but are different in that private goods are rival while club goods are not rival in consumption.
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10
A good that is excludable is one that someone can be prevented from using if she did not pay for it.
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11
Common resources and public goods have in common that they are not excludable and they are not rival in consumption.
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12
All goods that are excludable are also rival in consumption, but not all goods that are rival in consumption are excludable.
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13
You and your friends watch a movie in your bedroom. For you and your friends, the enjoyment that you get from watching the movie is not rival in consumption.
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14
When goods are available free of charge, the market forces that normally allocate resources in our economy are absent.
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15
Roads can be considered either public goods or common resources, depending on how congested they are.
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16
A free-rider is someone who receives the benefit of a good but avoids paying for it.
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17
A free rider is a person who pays for a good but does not receive the benefit of it.
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18
National Public Radio would be considered a club good.
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19
A good that is excludable but not rival is known as a club good.
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20
A pair of jeans is rival but non-excludable.
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21
When free riders are present in a market, the market generally fails to provide the efficient outcome.
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22
One benefit of the patent system is that it encourages the production of technical knowledge.
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23
Aristotle writes, "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." In this statement, Aristotle is referring to the free-rider problem that occurs when a person receives the benefit of a good without paying for it.
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24
The free-rider problem arises when the number of beneficiaries is large and exclusion of any of them is impossible.
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25
Some goods, such as lighthouses, can switch between being public goods and being private goods depending on the circumstances.
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26
Because the benefits of basic research are obvious and easy to measure, it is likely that the public sector pays for the right amount and the right kinds of basic research.
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27
A study that compares the costs and benefits to society of providing a public good is called externality analysis.
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28
London drivers who choose to drive in "congestion zones" pay a tax designed to reduce traffic congestion.
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29
One solution to the "Tragedy of the Commons" is to turn the common resource into a private good.
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30
Even economists who advocate small government agree that national defense is a good that the government should provide.
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31
Private markets usually provide lighthouses because ship captains have the incentive to navigate using the lighthouse and therefore will pay for the service.
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32
In determining whether and how much of a public good to provide, cost-benefits analysts use the same type of price signals for public goods as are readily available for private goods.
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33
An example of the "Tragedy of the Commons" is litter in the picnic area of a local park.
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34
Economists argue that we can calculate the value of a human life by observing voluntary risks that people take every day.
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35
The free-rider problem makes it unlikely that poverty will be entirely eliminated through private charity.
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36
Advocates of antipoverty programs claim that fighting poverty is a public good.
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37
Government agencies, such as the National Science Foundation, subsidize basic research because in the absence of a subsidy too little research would be conducted.
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38
Although national defense is currently a public good, economists who advocate small government generally agree that the U.S. should privatize national defense to increase the efficiency of the good.
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39
If we can conclude that human life has a finite value, cost-benefit analysis can lead to solutions in which human life is worth less than the cost of a potential project.
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40
In some cases the government can make everyone better off by raising taxes to pay for certain goods that the market fails to provide.
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41
Property rights are well established for

A)private goods.
B)public goods.
C)common resources.
D)both (b) and (c).
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42
Markets do not ensure that the air we breathe is clean because

A)clean air has no value.
B)the government prevents markets from doing so.
C)property rights are not well established for clean air.
D)clean air is impossible to produce .
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43
Depending on congestion, national parks can be either a common resource or a public good.
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44
Nontoll roads can be either public goods or common resources, depending upon the degree of congestion.
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45
In the Tragedy of the Commons, joint action among the individual citizens would be necessary to solve their common resource problem unless the government intervenes.
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46
Tolls are not effective in altering people's incentives to drive during rush hour.
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47
The pollution market failure is an example of the free rider problem.
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48
If Dave and Jesse are the only two fishermen in town and neither is bothered by the other's fishing, the lake they fish in is not a common resource.
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49
When a highway is congested, giving rise to negative externalities, it is appropriate to view the highway as a common resource.
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50
Consider the following problems: overcrowded public highways, overfishing in the ocean, polluted air, and the near-extinction of the wild rhinoceros. What do these problems have in common?

A)Private markets could easily solve them if governments left the markets alone.
B)They would all go away if the government sponsored an intensive public-information campaign.
C)They are all the result of a failure to establish clear property rights over something of value.
D)They are all the result of a failure of corrective taxes.
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51
One possible solution to the problem of protecting a common resource is to convert that resource to a private good.
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52
Table 11-6
Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning. Table 11-6 Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning.   ​ ​ ​Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $8 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. The number of cleaning hours that maximizes total surplus of Widgetapolis is 7 hours.

​Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $8 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. The number of cleaning hours that maximizes total surplus of Widgetapolis is 7 hours.
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53
The profit motive that stems from private ownership means that elephant populations are best protected as common resources.
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54
Table 11-6
Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning. Table 11-6 Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning.   ​ ​ Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $32 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. It would maximize Lydia's surplus if 6 hours of cleaning is done.​

Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $32 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. It would maximize Lydia's surplus if 6 hours of cleaning is done.​
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55
Markets may fail to allocate resources efficiently when property rights are not well established.
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56
Pollution is a negative externality, but it is not appropriate to view the problem of pollution as a common-resource problem.
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57
One person's use of common resources does not reduce the enjoyment other people receive from the resource.
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58
Governments that chose to make endangered elephants private goods have met with more success protecting elephants than governments that chose to make killing elephants illegal.
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59
A traffic light would be considered a common resource.
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60
Table 11-6
Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning. Table 11-6 Consider the city of Widgetapolis with only four residents, John, James, Mary, and Lydia. The four residents are trying to determine how many hours to spend in cleaning up the public lake. The table below shows each resident's willingness to pay for each hour of cleaning.   ​ ​ Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $32 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. It would maximize Mary's surplus if 3 hours of cleaning is done.​

Refer to Table 11-6. Suppose the cost to clean the lake is $32 per hour and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of cleaning the lake equally. It would maximize Mary's surplus if 3 hours of cleaning is done.​
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61
Which of the following represents a potential solution to the problem of environmental pollution?

A)corrective taxes
B)well established property rights
C)government regulation
D)All of the above are correct.
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62
Which of the following statements is correct?

A)Environmental degradation is an example of a free rider problem..
B)The division between public goods and common resources is clear-cut.
C)Some goods, such as lighthouses, may be either private or public goods.
D)The free-rider problem prevents governments from supplying public goods.
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63
It would always be a mistake to view

A)many species of animals as common resources.
B)a road as a public good.
C)national defense as a common resource.
D)a fireworks display as a public good.
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64
Markets fail to allocate resources efficiently when

A)demanders and suppliers cannot agree on a price.
B)goods are rival in consumption and excludable.
C)property rights are not well established.
D)too many buyers and sellers exist in the same market.
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65
When the absence of property rights causes a market failure, the government can potentially solve the problem

A)by clearly defining property rights.
B)through regulation.
C)by supplying the good itself.
D)All of the above are correct.
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66
Which of the following is not a common resource?

A)clean air
B)clean water
C)open grazing land
D)national defense
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67
A textbook is a

A)private good and the knowledge that one gains from reading the book is a common resource.
B)private good and the knowledge that one gains from reading the book is a public good.
C)common resource and the knowledge that one gains from reading the book is a public good.
D)common resource and the knowledge that one gains from reading the book is a private good.
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68
It would always be a mistake to view

A)a streetlight as a common resource.
B)a nontoll road as a public good.
C)the environment as a common resource.
D)a lighthouse as a public good.
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69
If the use of a common resource is not regulated,

A)no one can enjoy it.
B)it will tend to be underused.
C)property rights will be clearly defined.
D)it will be overused.
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70
In which of the following examples are property rights not well established?

A)Carmen smokes a cigarette outside the door to her office building.
B)Carlita stocks shelves in a grocery store.
C)Cameron watches a movie in his home theater room.
D)Cathy docks her boat at her lake house.
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71
A common theme among examples of market failure is

A)the good being provided harms society in some systematic way.
B)some item of value does not have an owner with the legal authority to control it.
C)cost-benefit analysis will show that private markets should provide the goods and services.
D)government intervention decreases the social benefits.
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72
Which of the following statements is not correct?

A)Common resources are rival in consumption but are not excludable.
B)Uncongested toll roads are examples of club goods.
C)When African elephants were privatized, the survival of the species deteriorated.
D)National defense is not rival in consumption, nor is it excludable.
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73
When property rights are not well established,

A)private goods become public goods.
B)markets fail to allocate resources efficiently.
C)the distribution of private goods is unfair.
D)government resources are used inefficiently.
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74
Governments can grant private property rights over resources that were previously viewed as public, such as fish or elephants. Why would governments want to do so?

A)to prevent overuse
B)to decrease taxes
C)to fight poverty
D)to increase consumption
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75
Which of the following is not a way for the government to solve the problem of excessive use of common resources?

A)regulation
B)taxes
C)turning the common resource into a public good
D)turning the common resource into a private good
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76
Each of the following would be considered a common resource except a

A)water reservoir.
B)streetlight.
C)a congested road.
D)book from a public library.
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77
Neither public goods nor common resources are

A)excludable, but only public goods are not rival in consumption.
B)excludable, but only common resources are not rival in consumption.
C)rival in consumption, but only public goods are not excludable.
D)rival in consumption, but only common resources are not excludable.
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78
Which of the following statements is correct?

A)The establishment of property rights sometimes gives rise to market failure.
B)The absence of property rights sometimes gives rise to market failure.
C)In the context of public goods, the Coase theorem implies that total surplus in some markets can be improved by the elimination of property rights.
D)Government regulation of private behavior, in response to market failure, can never improve social well-being.
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79
Four roommates share an off-campus house and equally share the cost of rent. Everyone says that she values a clean house, yet the house is usually dirty. To an economist, a clean house in this case represents

A)a common resource problem.
B)a public good.
C)a club good.
D)All of the above are correct.
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80
Which of the following is not a common resource?

A)elephants in the wild
B)a narrow trail in a park
C)a neighborhood garden
D)Neither a nor b is a common resource.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 453 flashcards in this deck.