Deck 10: Externalities

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Question
Restored historic buildings convey a positive externality because people who walk or ride by them can enjoy their beauty and the sense of history they provide.
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Question
Internalising a negative consumption externality will cause the market supply curve to shift to the left.
Question
Organisers of an outdoor concert in a park surrounded by residential neighbourhoods are likely to consider the noise and traffic cost to residential neighbourhoods when they assess the financial viability of the concert venture.
Question
In a market characterised by externalities, the market equilibrium fails to maximise the total benefit to society as a whole.
Question
Wind turbines that generate electricity near towns cannot be considered an externality because they don't generate greenhouse gases like thermal plants.
Question
The major problem facing private parties wishing to solve an externality problem is that transaction costs may prevent such a solution from occurring.
Question
Negative consumption externalities will have a socially optimal quantity that is smaller than the quantity determined by the private market.
Question
The Internet is a good example of a negative externality because it has aspects which may be inappropriate for some users.
Question
Policy responses that try to deal with market failure resulting from externalities are largely restricted to various forms of taxation.
Question
The ability of individuals to arrive at a private solution to an externality is dependent on the initial distribution of rights.
Question
The owner of a luxury 4WD enjoys a positive externality because the luxury 4WD offers added safety when compared to a small car.
Question
Externalities are generated by the consumption of goods.
Question
If the social cost of producing robots is less than the private cost of producing robots, the private market produces too few robots.
Question
Education has negative externalities for society.
Question
Despite the appealing logic of the Coase theorem, private actors often fail to resolve on their own the problems caused by externalities.
Question
If the marginal consumer values timber less than the social cost of harvesting it , the timber market will be characterised by a negative production externality.
Question
The size and scope of technology spillovers is easy for governments to measure.
Question
According to the Coase theorem, parties will bargain among themselves to reach an efficient solution without intervention.
Question
Market outcomes cannot be improved by government policies.
Question
Government subsidies to scientific research is aimed at controlling the negative externalities associated with technological advances.
Question
A market for pollution permits can efficiently allocate the right to pollute through the forces of supply and demand.
Question
Pigovian taxes enhance efficiency but the cost of administering such taxes frequently exceeds the revenue they raise for the government.
Question
When correcting for an externality, command-and-control policies are always preferable to market-based policies.
Question
Some economists believe that technology spillovers are pervasive and industries with the largest spillovers should be encouraged.
Question
The initial allocation of tradeable pollution permits will affect the level of economic efficiency in a market with a pollution externality.
Question
Government can internalise an externality by taxing the goods that have negative externalities and subsidising the goods that have positive externalities.
Question
Greenhouse gas emissions are a classic example of a negative production externality.
Question
Firms that can reduce pollution easily will be willing to sell their emissions permits.
Question
Taxation is often able to correct market externalities at a lower cost than regulations designed to achieve the same goal.
Question
In essence, the Pigovian tax places a price on the right to pollute.
Question
The most efficient way to achieve reductions in pollution is for each firm to reduce their pollution by the same amount.
Question
When weighing the costs and benefits of pollution, the costs always exceed the benefits because the benefit equals zero.
Question
Both pollution permits and Pigovian taxes are viewed as cost-effective ways to keep the environment clean.
Question
Because a driver's private motoring costs do not completely reflect the costs he imposes on others, he is likely to use the car more than is socially desirable.
Question
Total pollution is increased when firms are allowed to trade in carbon credits.
Question
Social welfare can be enhanced by allowing firms to trade their carbon credits.
Question
Luckily, the free market corrects for the cost to bystanders of a crying child, because the parent is irritated as much as, if not more than the bystander.
Question
Government can solve externality problems that are too costly for private parties to solve.
Question
Government policies to encourage technology spillovers may go to industries with the most political clout rather than industries with the largest spillovers.
Question
It is impossible to prohibit all polluting activity.
Question
When externalities exist, buyers and sellers:

A) neglect the external effects of their actions but the market equilibrium is still efficient
B) neglect the external effects of their actions and the market equilibrium is not efficient
C) do not neglect the external effects of their actions and the market equilibrium is efficient
D) do not neglect the external effects of their actions and the market equilibrium is not efficient
Question
Private parties can negotiate a solution to an externality in all cases.
Question
When Jake takes into account how his actions affect Jill, and changes these, an externality is solved.
Question
The government attempts to resolve negative externalities caused by automobile exhaust by: (i) taxing gasoline to reduce the amount that people drive
(ii) building safer highways
(iii) setting emission standards for automobiles

A) (i), (ii) and (iii) are all used to reduce emissions
B) only (i) and (iii) are used to reduce emissions
C) only (ii) and (iii) are used to reduce emissions
D) only (i) and (ii) are used to reduce emissions
Question
Vaccinations are heavily subsidised in order to get the optimal number of people vaccinated.
Question
All remedies that attempt to solve an externality problem share the goal of moving the allocation of resources closer to the private optimum.
Question
Government intervention in the economy that aims to promote technology-enhancing industries is called technology policy.
Question
In the absence of externalities, the invisible hand of the market place:

A) increases the transaction cost of contracting between parties to an exchange
B) is unable to resolve inherent inefficiencies in the market system
C) induces people to act in a manner inconsistent with self-interest
D) leads to a market outcome that maximises total benefit to society
Question
Inventors in developing countries are usually unable to capture the full benefit of their innovations. They therefore tend to devote too few resources to research. Government can address this problem of under-investment in research by: (i) increasing restrictions on trade
(ii) establishing a patent system to provide inventors with exclusive control over their inventions for a period of time
(iii) subsidising the purchase of technology from other countries.

A) only (i) is used
B) only (ii) is used
C) only (iii) is used
D) (i), (ii) and (iii) are all used
Question
It is generally difficult or impossible for private markets to take externalities into account because:

A) decision makers in the market fail to take account of the spillover effects of their behaviour
B) buyers and sellers in private markets are only interested in social wellbeing
C) people are only interested in short-term gains
D) governments are responsible for externality problems
Question
A negative externality exists when:

A) a person engages in an activity that has a spillover that makes a bystander better off
B) the market has only one seller
C) a firm sells its product in an external foreign market
D) a person engages in an activity that has a spillover that makes a bystander worse off
Question
Internalising externalities is one reason that some firms involve themselves in only one type of business.
Question
By creating a 'child-free zone', a restaurant could attempt to account for the costs that children impose on others.
Question
Unfortunately, the petrol tax does not make people take into account the risk they impose on others by driving large vehicles.
Question
Airports can generate a negative externality with the noise the landing aircraft makes on neighbourhoods. Policies to reduce this noise problem include:

A) charging passengers an airport departure tax
B) charging excise taxes on airline fuel
C) encouraging people to drive rather than fly
D) requiring aircraft to use 'whisper' technology to quieten their engines
Question
The production of paper is a chemical-intensive process that generates dioxin. Dioxin is a negative externality associated with the paper industry because:

A) the paper industry does not know that dioxin is a spillover
B) the paper industry often does not know what the regulations for dioxin are
C) self-interested paper producers have no incentive to incorporate the costs of dioxin pollution into their output decisions
D) corporations are only interested in short-term profits
Question
Contracts cannot solve the inefficiency that arises from externalities.
Question
While economists generally agree that markets are a good way to organise economic behaviour, there are some important exceptions. The exceptions include:

A) some markets produce negative externalities
B) some industries produce positive externalities
C) some markets are characterised by market failure
D) all of the above are true
Question
Negative externalities occur when one person's actions:

A) cause another person to lose money in a stock-market transaction.
B) cause his or her employer to lose business.
C) adversely affect the wellbeing of a bystander (or bystanders) who is (are) not party to a market exchange.
D) reveal his or her preference for foreign produced goods.
Question
Private owners of restored historical buildings are not likely to capture the full benefit of restoration so they tend to discard them too quickly. Many local governments respond to this problem by: (i) condemning historic buildings to make room for new development
(ii) regulating the destruction of historic buildings
(iii) providing tax breaks to owners of historic buildings who restore them.

A) (i), (ii) and (iii) are all used
B) only (i) and (iii) are used
C) only (ii) and (iii) are used
D) only (i) and (ii) are used
Question
The height of the demand curve for aluminum for any given quantity, shows the:

A) willingness to pay of the marginal supplier
B) willingness to pay of the marginal buyer
C) the gains from trade
D) opportunity cost
Question
To produce honey, beekeepers place hives of bees in orchards and crop fields. As bees gather nectar that they use to produce honey, they pollinate the orchards and fields increasing their yields of fruit and grain. This arrangement results in:

A) positive externalities that benefit both the beekeeper and the owner of the fields of fruit and grain
B) no significant additional benefit to anyone
C) a positive externality that benefits only the owner of the fields of fruit and grain
D) a positive externality that solely benefits the beekeeper
Question
Graph 10-1
<strong>Graph 10-1   Refer to Graph 10-1. Which price and quantity combination represents the social optimum?</strong> A) P<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>1</sub> B) P<sub>2</sub>, Q<sub>1</sub> C) P<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub> D) P<sub>2</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub> <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Graph 10-1. Which price and quantity combination represents the social optimum?

A) P1, Q1
B) P2, Q1
C) P1, Q2
D) P2, Q2
Question
An additional electric automobile on a congested freeway creates:

A) no production or consumption externality because electric cars do not pollute
B) a positive production externality because electric cars reduce pollution
C) a positive consumption externality because existing cars will increase their speed after the car enters the freeway
D) a negative consumption externality because its presence reduces the speed of traffic for cars already on the freeway
Question
When a production externality has a beneficial effect on a bystander at the market equilibrium:

A) society is unlikely to benefit from production subsidies
B) the social cost of production is less than the private cost
C) the private benefit from consumption is less than the social cost of production
D) none of the above is true
Question
At any given quantity, the willingness to pay in the market for automobile fuel is reflected in the:

A) value to the consumer of the last unit of automobile fuel bought
B) height of the supply curve at each quantity
C) value to the producer of the last unit of automobile fuel sold
D) total quantity of automobile fuel exchanged in the market
Question
Graph 10-2
<strong>Graph 10-2   This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s). In Graph 10-2, producer and consumer surplus at the point of market efficiency is represented by area(s):</strong> A) a + b B) a + d C) b + c D) c + d <div style=padding-top: 35px> This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s).
In Graph 10-2, producer and consumer surplus at the point of market efficiency is represented by area(s):

A) a + b
B) a + d
C) b + c
D) c + d
Question
Graph 10-2
<strong>Graph 10-2   This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s). In Graph 10-2, what price and quantity combination efficiently allocates resources in such a way that the total value to consumers who buy and use pork minus the total costs to the producers who make and sell pork is maximised?</strong> A) P<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>1</sub> B) P<sub>2</sub>, quantity of zero C) price of zero, Q<sub>2</sub> D) P<sub>0</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub> <div style=padding-top: 35px> This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s).
In Graph 10-2, what price and quantity combination efficiently allocates resources in such a way that the total value to consumers who buy and use pork minus the total costs to the producers who make and sell pork is maximised?

A) P1, Q1
B) P2, quantity of zero
C) price of zero, Q2
D) P0, Q2
Question
Graph 10-1
<strong>Graph 10-1   Refer to Graph 10-1. This graph reflects the presence of a:</strong> A) negative production externality B) positive production externality C) negative consumption externality D) positive consumption externality <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Graph 10-1. This graph reflects the presence of a:

A) negative production externality
B) positive production externality
C) negative consumption externality
D) positive consumption externality
Question
The impact of one person's actions on the wellbeing of a bystander is called:

A) competitive advantage
B) deadweight loss
C) market equilibrium
D) an externality
Question
Suppose that large scale pork production has the potential to create groundwater pollution. Why might this type of pollution be considered an externality?

A) the groundwater pollution reduces the cost of large scale pork production
B) the economic impact of a large-scale pork production facility is localised in a small geographic area
C) the pollution has the potential for creating a health risk for water users in the region surrounding the pork production facility
D) consumers will not reap the benefits of lower production cost from large-scale pork production
Question
If a particular market is associated with an externality, the social optimum should include the wellbeing of:

A) buyers, sellers and bystanders
B) bystanders and buyers
C) bystanders and sellers
D) buyers and sellers only
Question
An externality will:

A) usually be characterised as a form of market failure
B) cause markets to allocate resources efficiently
C) strengthen the role of the 'invisible hand' in the marketplace
D) always require the producer to compensate society
Question
Graph 10-1
<strong>Graph 10-1   Refer to Graph 10-1. In the figure shown the marginal:</strong> A) benefit of the positive production externality is measured by P<sub>3</sub> - P<sub>1</sub> B) cost of the negative production externality is measured by P<sub>3</sub> - P<sub>2</sub> C) cost of the negative production externality is measured by P<sub>3</sub> - P<sub>1</sub> D) cost of the negative production externality cannot be measured <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Graph 10-1. In the figure shown the marginal:

A) benefit of the positive production externality is measured by P3 - P1
B) cost of the negative production externality is measured by P3 - P2
C) cost of the negative production externality is measured by P3 - P1
D) cost of the negative production externality cannot be measured
Question
Suppose that water pollution creates a negative production externality on a local fishing firm. This means:

A) the fishing firm will catch as less fish than before at the same cost
B) it will be socially optimal for the water pollution to be eliminated
C) it will be socially optimal to do nothing about the water pollution
D) the fishing firm will catch more fish than before at the same cost
Question
Hikers frequently claim that livestock grazing in wilderness recreation areas reduce the satisfaction of their recreational hiking experience. An explanation would be that:

A) hikers don't eat beef
B) cattle farmers are insensitive to the recreational use of public lands
C) grazing cows create negative externalities that make hiking less pleasant
D) cattle should not be allowed to graze on public property
Question
The height of the supply curve at any given quantity of coal shows the:

A) value to the consumer of the last unit of coal bought
B) consumer's willingness to pay for coal at each quantity
C) cost to the producer of the last unit of coal sold
D) total quantity of coal exchanged in the market
Question
At any given quantity, the height of the supply curve for elephant ivory shows the:

A) willingness to pay of the marginal supplier
B) willingness to pay of the marginal buyer
C) value to the consumer of the last unit of elephant ivory bought
D) cost of the marginal seller
Question
Suppose people plant flowering trees near their homes to encourage rare native birds to feed. If people believe that an increase in native bird populations is valuable, people who plant these trees:

A) generate a negative consumption externality for their neighbours
B) generate a positive production externality for their neighbours
C) generate a positive consumption externality for their neighbours
D) generate a negative production externality for their neighbours
Question
Graph 10-2
<strong>Graph 10-2   This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s). In Graph 10-2, consumer surplus would be maximised at what price and quantity combination?</strong> A) P<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>1</sub> B) P<sub>2</sub>, quantity of zero C) price of zero, Q<sub>2</sub> D) P<sub>0</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub> <div style=padding-top: 35px> This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s).
In Graph 10-2, consumer surplus would be maximised at what price and quantity combination?

A) P1, Q1
B) P2, quantity of zero
C) price of zero, Q2
D) P0, Q2
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Deck 10: Externalities
1
Restored historic buildings convey a positive externality because people who walk or ride by them can enjoy their beauty and the sense of history they provide.
True
2
Internalising a negative consumption externality will cause the market supply curve to shift to the left.
False
3
Organisers of an outdoor concert in a park surrounded by residential neighbourhoods are likely to consider the noise and traffic cost to residential neighbourhoods when they assess the financial viability of the concert venture.
False
4
In a market characterised by externalities, the market equilibrium fails to maximise the total benefit to society as a whole.
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5
Wind turbines that generate electricity near towns cannot be considered an externality because they don't generate greenhouse gases like thermal plants.
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6
The major problem facing private parties wishing to solve an externality problem is that transaction costs may prevent such a solution from occurring.
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7
Negative consumption externalities will have a socially optimal quantity that is smaller than the quantity determined by the private market.
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8
The Internet is a good example of a negative externality because it has aspects which may be inappropriate for some users.
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9
Policy responses that try to deal with market failure resulting from externalities are largely restricted to various forms of taxation.
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10
The ability of individuals to arrive at a private solution to an externality is dependent on the initial distribution of rights.
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11
The owner of a luxury 4WD enjoys a positive externality because the luxury 4WD offers added safety when compared to a small car.
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12
Externalities are generated by the consumption of goods.
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13
If the social cost of producing robots is less than the private cost of producing robots, the private market produces too few robots.
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14
Education has negative externalities for society.
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15
Despite the appealing logic of the Coase theorem, private actors often fail to resolve on their own the problems caused by externalities.
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16
If the marginal consumer values timber less than the social cost of harvesting it , the timber market will be characterised by a negative production externality.
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17
The size and scope of technology spillovers is easy for governments to measure.
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18
According to the Coase theorem, parties will bargain among themselves to reach an efficient solution without intervention.
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19
Market outcomes cannot be improved by government policies.
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20
Government subsidies to scientific research is aimed at controlling the negative externalities associated with technological advances.
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21
A market for pollution permits can efficiently allocate the right to pollute through the forces of supply and demand.
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22
Pigovian taxes enhance efficiency but the cost of administering such taxes frequently exceeds the revenue they raise for the government.
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23
When correcting for an externality, command-and-control policies are always preferable to market-based policies.
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24
Some economists believe that technology spillovers are pervasive and industries with the largest spillovers should be encouraged.
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25
The initial allocation of tradeable pollution permits will affect the level of economic efficiency in a market with a pollution externality.
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26
Government can internalise an externality by taxing the goods that have negative externalities and subsidising the goods that have positive externalities.
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27
Greenhouse gas emissions are a classic example of a negative production externality.
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28
Firms that can reduce pollution easily will be willing to sell their emissions permits.
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29
Taxation is often able to correct market externalities at a lower cost than regulations designed to achieve the same goal.
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30
In essence, the Pigovian tax places a price on the right to pollute.
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31
The most efficient way to achieve reductions in pollution is for each firm to reduce their pollution by the same amount.
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32
When weighing the costs and benefits of pollution, the costs always exceed the benefits because the benefit equals zero.
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33
Both pollution permits and Pigovian taxes are viewed as cost-effective ways to keep the environment clean.
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34
Because a driver's private motoring costs do not completely reflect the costs he imposes on others, he is likely to use the car more than is socially desirable.
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35
Total pollution is increased when firms are allowed to trade in carbon credits.
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36
Social welfare can be enhanced by allowing firms to trade their carbon credits.
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37
Luckily, the free market corrects for the cost to bystanders of a crying child, because the parent is irritated as much as, if not more than the bystander.
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38
Government can solve externality problems that are too costly for private parties to solve.
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39
Government policies to encourage technology spillovers may go to industries with the most political clout rather than industries with the largest spillovers.
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40
It is impossible to prohibit all polluting activity.
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41
When externalities exist, buyers and sellers:

A) neglect the external effects of their actions but the market equilibrium is still efficient
B) neglect the external effects of their actions and the market equilibrium is not efficient
C) do not neglect the external effects of their actions and the market equilibrium is efficient
D) do not neglect the external effects of their actions and the market equilibrium is not efficient
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42
Private parties can negotiate a solution to an externality in all cases.
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43
When Jake takes into account how his actions affect Jill, and changes these, an externality is solved.
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44
The government attempts to resolve negative externalities caused by automobile exhaust by: (i) taxing gasoline to reduce the amount that people drive
(ii) building safer highways
(iii) setting emission standards for automobiles

A) (i), (ii) and (iii) are all used to reduce emissions
B) only (i) and (iii) are used to reduce emissions
C) only (ii) and (iii) are used to reduce emissions
D) only (i) and (ii) are used to reduce emissions
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45
Vaccinations are heavily subsidised in order to get the optimal number of people vaccinated.
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46
All remedies that attempt to solve an externality problem share the goal of moving the allocation of resources closer to the private optimum.
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47
Government intervention in the economy that aims to promote technology-enhancing industries is called technology policy.
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48
In the absence of externalities, the invisible hand of the market place:

A) increases the transaction cost of contracting between parties to an exchange
B) is unable to resolve inherent inefficiencies in the market system
C) induces people to act in a manner inconsistent with self-interest
D) leads to a market outcome that maximises total benefit to society
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49
Inventors in developing countries are usually unable to capture the full benefit of their innovations. They therefore tend to devote too few resources to research. Government can address this problem of under-investment in research by: (i) increasing restrictions on trade
(ii) establishing a patent system to provide inventors with exclusive control over their inventions for a period of time
(iii) subsidising the purchase of technology from other countries.

A) only (i) is used
B) only (ii) is used
C) only (iii) is used
D) (i), (ii) and (iii) are all used
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50
It is generally difficult or impossible for private markets to take externalities into account because:

A) decision makers in the market fail to take account of the spillover effects of their behaviour
B) buyers and sellers in private markets are only interested in social wellbeing
C) people are only interested in short-term gains
D) governments are responsible for externality problems
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51
A negative externality exists when:

A) a person engages in an activity that has a spillover that makes a bystander better off
B) the market has only one seller
C) a firm sells its product in an external foreign market
D) a person engages in an activity that has a spillover that makes a bystander worse off
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52
Internalising externalities is one reason that some firms involve themselves in only one type of business.
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53
By creating a 'child-free zone', a restaurant could attempt to account for the costs that children impose on others.
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54
Unfortunately, the petrol tax does not make people take into account the risk they impose on others by driving large vehicles.
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55
Airports can generate a negative externality with the noise the landing aircraft makes on neighbourhoods. Policies to reduce this noise problem include:

A) charging passengers an airport departure tax
B) charging excise taxes on airline fuel
C) encouraging people to drive rather than fly
D) requiring aircraft to use 'whisper' technology to quieten their engines
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56
The production of paper is a chemical-intensive process that generates dioxin. Dioxin is a negative externality associated with the paper industry because:

A) the paper industry does not know that dioxin is a spillover
B) the paper industry often does not know what the regulations for dioxin are
C) self-interested paper producers have no incentive to incorporate the costs of dioxin pollution into their output decisions
D) corporations are only interested in short-term profits
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57
Contracts cannot solve the inefficiency that arises from externalities.
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58
While economists generally agree that markets are a good way to organise economic behaviour, there are some important exceptions. The exceptions include:

A) some markets produce negative externalities
B) some industries produce positive externalities
C) some markets are characterised by market failure
D) all of the above are true
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59
Negative externalities occur when one person's actions:

A) cause another person to lose money in a stock-market transaction.
B) cause his or her employer to lose business.
C) adversely affect the wellbeing of a bystander (or bystanders) who is (are) not party to a market exchange.
D) reveal his or her preference for foreign produced goods.
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60
Private owners of restored historical buildings are not likely to capture the full benefit of restoration so they tend to discard them too quickly. Many local governments respond to this problem by: (i) condemning historic buildings to make room for new development
(ii) regulating the destruction of historic buildings
(iii) providing tax breaks to owners of historic buildings who restore them.

A) (i), (ii) and (iii) are all used
B) only (i) and (iii) are used
C) only (ii) and (iii) are used
D) only (i) and (ii) are used
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61
The height of the demand curve for aluminum for any given quantity, shows the:

A) willingness to pay of the marginal supplier
B) willingness to pay of the marginal buyer
C) the gains from trade
D) opportunity cost
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62
To produce honey, beekeepers place hives of bees in orchards and crop fields. As bees gather nectar that they use to produce honey, they pollinate the orchards and fields increasing their yields of fruit and grain. This arrangement results in:

A) positive externalities that benefit both the beekeeper and the owner of the fields of fruit and grain
B) no significant additional benefit to anyone
C) a positive externality that benefits only the owner of the fields of fruit and grain
D) a positive externality that solely benefits the beekeeper
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63
Graph 10-1
<strong>Graph 10-1   Refer to Graph 10-1. Which price and quantity combination represents the social optimum?</strong> A) P<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>1</sub> B) P<sub>2</sub>, Q<sub>1</sub> C) P<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub> D) P<sub>2</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub>
Refer to Graph 10-1. Which price and quantity combination represents the social optimum?

A) P1, Q1
B) P2, Q1
C) P1, Q2
D) P2, Q2
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64
An additional electric automobile on a congested freeway creates:

A) no production or consumption externality because electric cars do not pollute
B) a positive production externality because electric cars reduce pollution
C) a positive consumption externality because existing cars will increase their speed after the car enters the freeway
D) a negative consumption externality because its presence reduces the speed of traffic for cars already on the freeway
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65
When a production externality has a beneficial effect on a bystander at the market equilibrium:

A) society is unlikely to benefit from production subsidies
B) the social cost of production is less than the private cost
C) the private benefit from consumption is less than the social cost of production
D) none of the above is true
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66
At any given quantity, the willingness to pay in the market for automobile fuel is reflected in the:

A) value to the consumer of the last unit of automobile fuel bought
B) height of the supply curve at each quantity
C) value to the producer of the last unit of automobile fuel sold
D) total quantity of automobile fuel exchanged in the market
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67
Graph 10-2
<strong>Graph 10-2   This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s). In Graph 10-2, producer and consumer surplus at the point of market efficiency is represented by area(s):</strong> A) a + b B) a + d C) b + c D) c + d This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s).
In Graph 10-2, producer and consumer surplus at the point of market efficiency is represented by area(s):

A) a + b
B) a + d
C) b + c
D) c + d
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68
Graph 10-2
<strong>Graph 10-2   This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s). In Graph 10-2, what price and quantity combination efficiently allocates resources in such a way that the total value to consumers who buy and use pork minus the total costs to the producers who make and sell pork is maximised?</strong> A) P<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>1</sub> B) P<sub>2</sub>, quantity of zero C) price of zero, Q<sub>2</sub> D) P<sub>0</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub> This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s).
In Graph 10-2, what price and quantity combination efficiently allocates resources in such a way that the total value to consumers who buy and use pork minus the total costs to the producers who make and sell pork is maximised?

A) P1, Q1
B) P2, quantity of zero
C) price of zero, Q2
D) P0, Q2
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69
Graph 10-1
<strong>Graph 10-1   Refer to Graph 10-1. This graph reflects the presence of a:</strong> A) negative production externality B) positive production externality C) negative consumption externality D) positive consumption externality
Refer to Graph 10-1. This graph reflects the presence of a:

A) negative production externality
B) positive production externality
C) negative consumption externality
D) positive consumption externality
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70
The impact of one person's actions on the wellbeing of a bystander is called:

A) competitive advantage
B) deadweight loss
C) market equilibrium
D) an externality
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71
Suppose that large scale pork production has the potential to create groundwater pollution. Why might this type of pollution be considered an externality?

A) the groundwater pollution reduces the cost of large scale pork production
B) the economic impact of a large-scale pork production facility is localised in a small geographic area
C) the pollution has the potential for creating a health risk for water users in the region surrounding the pork production facility
D) consumers will not reap the benefits of lower production cost from large-scale pork production
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72
If a particular market is associated with an externality, the social optimum should include the wellbeing of:

A) buyers, sellers and bystanders
B) bystanders and buyers
C) bystanders and sellers
D) buyers and sellers only
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73
An externality will:

A) usually be characterised as a form of market failure
B) cause markets to allocate resources efficiently
C) strengthen the role of the 'invisible hand' in the marketplace
D) always require the producer to compensate society
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74
Graph 10-1
<strong>Graph 10-1   Refer to Graph 10-1. In the figure shown the marginal:</strong> A) benefit of the positive production externality is measured by P<sub>3</sub> - P<sub>1</sub> B) cost of the negative production externality is measured by P<sub>3</sub> - P<sub>2</sub> C) cost of the negative production externality is measured by P<sub>3</sub> - P<sub>1</sub> D) cost of the negative production externality cannot be measured
Refer to Graph 10-1. In the figure shown the marginal:

A) benefit of the positive production externality is measured by P3 - P1
B) cost of the negative production externality is measured by P3 - P2
C) cost of the negative production externality is measured by P3 - P1
D) cost of the negative production externality cannot be measured
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75
Suppose that water pollution creates a negative production externality on a local fishing firm. This means:

A) the fishing firm will catch as less fish than before at the same cost
B) it will be socially optimal for the water pollution to be eliminated
C) it will be socially optimal to do nothing about the water pollution
D) the fishing firm will catch more fish than before at the same cost
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76
Hikers frequently claim that livestock grazing in wilderness recreation areas reduce the satisfaction of their recreational hiking experience. An explanation would be that:

A) hikers don't eat beef
B) cattle farmers are insensitive to the recreational use of public lands
C) grazing cows create negative externalities that make hiking less pleasant
D) cattle should not be allowed to graze on public property
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77
The height of the supply curve at any given quantity of coal shows the:

A) value to the consumer of the last unit of coal bought
B) consumer's willingness to pay for coal at each quantity
C) cost to the producer of the last unit of coal sold
D) total quantity of coal exchanged in the market
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78
At any given quantity, the height of the supply curve for elephant ivory shows the:

A) willingness to pay of the marginal supplier
B) willingness to pay of the marginal buyer
C) value to the consumer of the last unit of elephant ivory bought
D) cost of the marginal seller
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79
Suppose people plant flowering trees near their homes to encourage rare native birds to feed. If people believe that an increase in native bird populations is valuable, people who plant these trees:

A) generate a negative consumption externality for their neighbours
B) generate a positive production externality for their neighbours
C) generate a positive consumption externality for their neighbours
D) generate a negative production externality for their neighbours
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80
Graph 10-2
<strong>Graph 10-2   This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s). In Graph 10-2, consumer surplus would be maximised at what price and quantity combination?</strong> A) P<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>1</sub> B) P<sub>2</sub>, quantity of zero C) price of zero, Q<sub>2</sub> D) P<sub>0</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub> This graph depicts the market for pork. Use this information to answer the following question(s).
In Graph 10-2, consumer surplus would be maximised at what price and quantity combination?

A) P1, Q1
B) P2, quantity of zero
C) price of zero, Q2
D) P0, Q2
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Unlock Deck
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