Deck 15: The Shortcomings of Free Markets

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Question
When MSC > MPC, there are detrimental externalities.
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Question
Competitive markets tend to produce an inefficiently large amount of beneficial externalities.
Question
An efficient allocation of resources requires that a product's price equals its average cost.
Question
The production possibilities frontier shows the feasible combinations of production without waste.
Question
If polluters are forced to pay for the cost of their pollution, they will reduce pollution toward a socially optimal amount.
Question
Market economies produce only a few relatively minor defects.
Question
Efficient resource allocation is defined as MC = AC.
Question
If a commodity's price is above its marginal cost, the market will tend to produce too much of the good.
Question
An efficient allocation of resources requires each product's price equals its marginal cost.
Question
Marginal social cost is made up of marginal private cost and external cost.
Question
A monopoly price reflects a good's marginal utility.
Question
As long as the market sets prices above marginal costs, production will be efficient.
Question
When General Motors pays an outside vendor for auto parts, this is an external cost.
Question
Society would be better off with more products that create beneficial externalities.
Question
The pollution emitted by a power plant is an example of a detrimental externality.
Question
Externalities can be either detrimental or beneficial to others.
Question
An unregulated market economy provides material wealth but does not generate effective control of environmental damage.
Question
Marginal social costs are the sum of marginal private costs and incidental costs.
Question
A market economy provides solutions to almost all social ills such as poverty and environmental damage.
Question
If the market mechanism is efficient, the marginal cost accurately measures the opportunity cost of a good or service.
Question
The marginal cost of serving an additional user of a public good is zero.
Question
Private ownership of rivers and lakes will halt all water pollution.
Question
Imposing fines on companies that contribute heavily to air and water pollution is an attempt to bring marginal private costs in line with marginal social costs.
Question
A public good has the quality of excludability but not the quality of depletability.
Question
Private goods are not excludable.
Question
If a firm's activities generate detrimental externalities, the marginal social cost will be less than the marginal private cost.
Question
There is no way that externalities can be corrected.
Question
An industry that generates detrimental externalities will have a marginal social cost higher than the marginal private cost to the industry.
Question
Examples of public goods include national defense, police, and the U.S. Postal Service.
Question
All externalities are detrimental.
Question
A private good is characterized by excludability and depletability.
Question
Most Americans would voluntarily support defense without required taxation.
Question
The market mechanism is more efficient in allocating resources between time periods than it is in allocating resources among different industries.
Question
It is possible to charge a price for a pure public good.
Question
A free rider is one who enjoys the benefits of a public good without paying for it.
Question
Government can deal with externalities through the use of taxes and subsidies.
Question
Public goods could effectively be provided by private markets, but we choose to provide them through government.
Question
Education is subsidized because it generates beneficial externalities.
Question
Government gives subsidies to encourage production of products with beneficial externalities.
Question
Low interest rates will persuade corporations to invest more right now.
Question
Rent seeking refers to unproductive activity in the pursuit of profit.
Question
Due to Pigou's "defective telescopic faculty," a market economy is inefficient in allocating resources between the present and the future.
Question
Rent seeking is a way of earning profit without adding to the product's value.
Question
A market will be efficient even if there is imperfect information as long as the market is competitive.
Question
Markets can efficiently handle irreversible decisions without involvement of government.
Question
The interest rate is determined purely by market forces, and not by government involvement.
Question
Moral hazard encourages people to take risks.
Question
Government action can usually perfectly correct the market's shortcomings.
Question
Conscious manipulation of the interest rate causes it to become a less effective tool in allocating resources among time periods.
Question
Rent seeking creates incentives for firms to use resources efficiently.
Question
The cost of trash removal goes up, in part at least, because labor productivity in auto manufacturing goes up.
Question
An increase in wages in the public sector is caused solely by increased labor productivity in that sector.
Question
The opportunity cost of postponing income to some future time depends on the interest rate.
Question
As productivity in the manufacturing sector increases, the service sector must keep pace or it will become more expensive in the long run.
Question
A potential cause of competitive market failure is symmetric information.
Question
Asymmetric information generally leads to efficient resource allocation.
Question
An increase in wages in the public sector is always accompanied by an increase in labor productivity.
Question
If both a buyer and a seller have the same information, they are said to have symmetric information.
Question
The cost disease of services explains the problems surrounding the health-care crisis.
Question
As manufacturing becomes more efficient, services can be expected to become more costly.
Question
Markets are primarily responsible for the rapid rise in productivity during the 20th century.
Question
Because technology has automated so many functions, personal services have become cheaper in order to compete.
Question
In an efficient market without externalities,

A)price equals marginal private cost and is below marginal social cost.
B)price equals marginal private cost and marginal social cost.
C)price equals marginal private value and is below marginal external value.
D)price equals marginal private value and marginal external value.
Question
Productivity growth tends to affect all industries to the same degree.
Question
In the event of a detrimental externality that affects the public interest, government action is the only solution.
Question
In an ideal competitive market,

A)excludable goods are minimized.
B)there are no depleteable goods.
C)external benefits are maximized.
D)social surplus is maximized.
Question
The factor that most often leads to underpricing and overuse of an economic resource is human greed.
Question
The construct used to demonstrate efficient use of society's resources is the

A)production possibilities frontier.
B)payoff matrix.
C)input-output table.
D)cost-benefit table.
Question
Is increased production of a good beneficial to society?

A)Yes, because scarcity is such an overriding concern.
B)Yes, because more is always better.
C)Maybe, it depends on what is foregone.
D)No, because increased production does not increase utility.
Question
If the price of a commodity is above marginal cost, then the economy will tend to

A)overproduce the item.
B)underproduce the item.
C)produce the optimal amount of the item.
D)overproduce and underproduce the item cyclically.
Question
Which of the following observations is true?

A)The cost disease is most prevalent in low income countries.
B)The cost disease affects public goods but not private goods.
C)The cost disease is most prevalent in commodity markets.
D)The cost disease occurs as the opportunity cost of labor increases.
Question
Markets will always create more efficient outcomes without government intervention.
Question
Producing more cabbage will be inefficient if

A)the marginal opportunity cost of cabbage is less than the marginal value.
B)cabbage production can be increased without reducing production of other goods.
C)the marginal value of forgone lettuce is greater than the marginal value of cabbage.
D)the marginal value of forgone lettuce is less than the marginal value of cabbage.
Question
What rule must be followed to obtain an efficient allocation of resources?

A)P = AC.
B)P = MC.
C)P = AR.
D)MR = AC.
Question
Which of the following does not cause competitive market failure?

A)Detrimental externalities
B)Beneficial externalities
C)Poorly defined property rights
D)The cost disease
Question
On balance, markets do some things very well, and some things poorly.
Question
As wages for manufacturing workers rise, wages for service workers will stay the same.
Question
For most industrial nations, health-care costs have increased faster than the rate of inflation.
Question
Which of the following is an imperfection of market economies?

A)They produce inexpensive services but expensive manufactured goods.
B)They place undue importance on the needs of future generations.
C)They cannot provide certain goods such as national defense.
D)They distribute income too unequally.
Question
Productivity in manufacturing sectors has risen faster than in service sectors.
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Deck 15: The Shortcomings of Free Markets
1
When MSC > MPC, there are detrimental externalities.
True
2
Competitive markets tend to produce an inefficiently large amount of beneficial externalities.
True
3
An efficient allocation of resources requires that a product's price equals its average cost.
False
4
The production possibilities frontier shows the feasible combinations of production without waste.
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5
If polluters are forced to pay for the cost of their pollution, they will reduce pollution toward a socially optimal amount.
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k this deck
6
Market economies produce only a few relatively minor defects.
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7
Efficient resource allocation is defined as MC = AC.
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8
If a commodity's price is above its marginal cost, the market will tend to produce too much of the good.
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9
An efficient allocation of resources requires each product's price equals its marginal cost.
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10
Marginal social cost is made up of marginal private cost and external cost.
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11
A monopoly price reflects a good's marginal utility.
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12
As long as the market sets prices above marginal costs, production will be efficient.
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13
When General Motors pays an outside vendor for auto parts, this is an external cost.
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14
Society would be better off with more products that create beneficial externalities.
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15
The pollution emitted by a power plant is an example of a detrimental externality.
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16
Externalities can be either detrimental or beneficial to others.
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17
An unregulated market economy provides material wealth but does not generate effective control of environmental damage.
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18
Marginal social costs are the sum of marginal private costs and incidental costs.
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19
A market economy provides solutions to almost all social ills such as poverty and environmental damage.
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20
If the market mechanism is efficient, the marginal cost accurately measures the opportunity cost of a good or service.
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21
The marginal cost of serving an additional user of a public good is zero.
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22
Private ownership of rivers and lakes will halt all water pollution.
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23
Imposing fines on companies that contribute heavily to air and water pollution is an attempt to bring marginal private costs in line with marginal social costs.
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24
A public good has the quality of excludability but not the quality of depletability.
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25
Private goods are not excludable.
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26
If a firm's activities generate detrimental externalities, the marginal social cost will be less than the marginal private cost.
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27
There is no way that externalities can be corrected.
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28
An industry that generates detrimental externalities will have a marginal social cost higher than the marginal private cost to the industry.
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29
Examples of public goods include national defense, police, and the U.S. Postal Service.
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30
All externalities are detrimental.
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31
A private good is characterized by excludability and depletability.
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32
Most Americans would voluntarily support defense without required taxation.
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33
The market mechanism is more efficient in allocating resources between time periods than it is in allocating resources among different industries.
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34
It is possible to charge a price for a pure public good.
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35
A free rider is one who enjoys the benefits of a public good without paying for it.
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36
Government can deal with externalities through the use of taxes and subsidies.
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37
Public goods could effectively be provided by private markets, but we choose to provide them through government.
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38
Education is subsidized because it generates beneficial externalities.
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39
Government gives subsidies to encourage production of products with beneficial externalities.
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40
Low interest rates will persuade corporations to invest more right now.
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41
Rent seeking refers to unproductive activity in the pursuit of profit.
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42
Due to Pigou's "defective telescopic faculty," a market economy is inefficient in allocating resources between the present and the future.
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k this deck
43
Rent seeking is a way of earning profit without adding to the product's value.
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44
A market will be efficient even if there is imperfect information as long as the market is competitive.
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45
Markets can efficiently handle irreversible decisions without involvement of government.
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46
The interest rate is determined purely by market forces, and not by government involvement.
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47
Moral hazard encourages people to take risks.
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48
Government action can usually perfectly correct the market's shortcomings.
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49
Conscious manipulation of the interest rate causes it to become a less effective tool in allocating resources among time periods.
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50
Rent seeking creates incentives for firms to use resources efficiently.
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k this deck
51
The cost of trash removal goes up, in part at least, because labor productivity in auto manufacturing goes up.
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k this deck
52
An increase in wages in the public sector is caused solely by increased labor productivity in that sector.
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53
The opportunity cost of postponing income to some future time depends on the interest rate.
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54
As productivity in the manufacturing sector increases, the service sector must keep pace or it will become more expensive in the long run.
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55
A potential cause of competitive market failure is symmetric information.
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56
Asymmetric information generally leads to efficient resource allocation.
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57
An increase in wages in the public sector is always accompanied by an increase in labor productivity.
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58
If both a buyer and a seller have the same information, they are said to have symmetric information.
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59
The cost disease of services explains the problems surrounding the health-care crisis.
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60
As manufacturing becomes more efficient, services can be expected to become more costly.
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61
Markets are primarily responsible for the rapid rise in productivity during the 20th century.
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k this deck
62
Because technology has automated so many functions, personal services have become cheaper in order to compete.
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k this deck
63
In an efficient market without externalities,

A)price equals marginal private cost and is below marginal social cost.
B)price equals marginal private cost and marginal social cost.
C)price equals marginal private value and is below marginal external value.
D)price equals marginal private value and marginal external value.
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64
Productivity growth tends to affect all industries to the same degree.
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65
In the event of a detrimental externality that affects the public interest, government action is the only solution.
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k this deck
66
In an ideal competitive market,

A)excludable goods are minimized.
B)there are no depleteable goods.
C)external benefits are maximized.
D)social surplus is maximized.
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k this deck
67
The factor that most often leads to underpricing and overuse of an economic resource is human greed.
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k this deck
68
The construct used to demonstrate efficient use of society's resources is the

A)production possibilities frontier.
B)payoff matrix.
C)input-output table.
D)cost-benefit table.
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Unlock for access to all 219 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Is increased production of a good beneficial to society?

A)Yes, because scarcity is such an overriding concern.
B)Yes, because more is always better.
C)Maybe, it depends on what is foregone.
D)No, because increased production does not increase utility.
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Unlock for access to all 219 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
If the price of a commodity is above marginal cost, then the economy will tend to

A)overproduce the item.
B)underproduce the item.
C)produce the optimal amount of the item.
D)overproduce and underproduce the item cyclically.
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Unlock for access to all 219 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Which of the following observations is true?

A)The cost disease is most prevalent in low income countries.
B)The cost disease affects public goods but not private goods.
C)The cost disease is most prevalent in commodity markets.
D)The cost disease occurs as the opportunity cost of labor increases.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
Markets will always create more efficient outcomes without government intervention.
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Unlock for access to all 219 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
73
Producing more cabbage will be inefficient if

A)the marginal opportunity cost of cabbage is less than the marginal value.
B)cabbage production can be increased without reducing production of other goods.
C)the marginal value of forgone lettuce is greater than the marginal value of cabbage.
D)the marginal value of forgone lettuce is less than the marginal value of cabbage.
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Unlock for access to all 219 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
What rule must be followed to obtain an efficient allocation of resources?

A)P = AC.
B)P = MC.
C)P = AR.
D)MR = AC.
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k this deck
75
Which of the following does not cause competitive market failure?

A)Detrimental externalities
B)Beneficial externalities
C)Poorly defined property rights
D)The cost disease
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k this deck
76
On balance, markets do some things very well, and some things poorly.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
As wages for manufacturing workers rise, wages for service workers will stay the same.
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k this deck
78
For most industrial nations, health-care costs have increased faster than the rate of inflation.
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Unlock for access to all 219 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Which of the following is an imperfection of market economies?

A)They produce inexpensive services but expensive manufactured goods.
B)They place undue importance on the needs of future generations.
C)They cannot provide certain goods such as national defense.
D)They distribute income too unequally.
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Unlock for access to all 219 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
Productivity in manufacturing sectors has risen faster than in service sectors.
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locked card icon
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Unlock for access to all 219 flashcards in this deck.