Deck 16: Externalities the Environment and Natural Resources

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Question
In the last three decades, air quality in American cities has improved.
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Question
Pollution is an example of a negative externality.
Question
Environmental destruction is peculiar to centrally planned economies.
Question
The production of smoke as a pollutant is a failure of the market system.
Question
Externalities can create a threat to environmental quality.
Question
Centrally planned economies like China produce relatively little pollution.
Question
If not recycled, an input used in production ultimately winds up as a waste product.
Question
Pollution is a relatively new phenomenon.
Question
Increasing environmental awareness in the United States has occurred with increasing GDP, which has reduced concerns about basic needs.
Question
Recycling rates for aluminum, paper, and glass have been increasing in the United States.
Question
Externalities are benefits or damages conferred upon people who are directly involved in an exchange of a good or service.
Question
Increasing GDP generally causes increases in problems of waste disposal.
Question
Individuals and government have been contributors in harming the environment.
Question
Environmental problems occur exclusively in capitalist economies.
Question
The pricing system has a failure built into it when externalities exist.
Question
The Army Corps of Engineers has been accused of acting on the basis of a so-called "edifice complex."
Question
Basic supply and demand analysis can be used to explain how externalities lead to environmental problems.
Question
Economists believe that externalities can be cured by market methods.
Question
Economists believe it is feasible and desirable to reduce environmental damage to zero.
Question
Economists believe that the goal of environmental policy should be zero pollution.
Question
Direct controls often require long legal proceedings before they can be effective.
Question
Economists generally consider the use of taxes as the most efficient way of solving pollution problems.
Question
Direct controls have traditionally been used heavily to control pollution in the U.S.
Question
When pollution problems arise from a sudden crisis, pollution taxes are a useful form of control.
Question
Pollution taxes are preferred to direct controls because they don't require a way of measuring pollutants produced.
Question
Direct controls are considered inefficient because all firms are forced to pay the same costs.
Question
When pollution emissions can be measured taxation will tend to be more effective than any other method of controlling pollution.
Question
Voluntary programs are dependable ways to protect the environment.
Question
Emissions permits might be called a "license to pollute."
Question
One advantage of emissions permits is that they allow the government to choose the level of pollution reduction.
Question
Rising prices will discourage consumption and encourage conservation.
Question
Voluntary programs, direct controls, and emissions taxes are all equally effective ways of controlling pollution.
Question
Although pollution is caused by a failure of the market, many economists believe that the best way to protect the environment is to utilize the price mechanism.
Question
Increasing scarcity of a resource causes new supplies to become more and more costly.
Question
Economic theory predicts that the price of a depletable resource will rise as it becomes more scarce.
Question
Direct controls have a clear advantage when a total ban is necessary.
Question
Taxing pollution will encourage firms to reduce pollutants dumped in the atmosphere or in streams.
Question
Emissions permits allow polluters to pay for the right to pollute a specified amount.
Question
A pollution tax penalizes inefficient firms.
Question
Charging firms that emit pollutants is one way to deal with pollution.
Question
The worst and most difficult to extract resources are used first.
Question
Unexpected discoveries of mineral reserves will ordinarily cause the price of these minerals to increase.
Question
Even if demand for a resource grows over time, ever-rising prices of the resource that result from its growing scarcity still discourage consumption.
Question
Centrally planned economies are able to cope with environmental pollution issues much better than capitalist countries.
Question
Increased concern about environmental problems derive partly from

A)concerns about increasing economic output.
B)concerns about unemployment and inflation.
C)new awareness that the problems exist.
D)concerns about the quality of life.
Question
Rising prices of resources leads to inefficient resource use by industry.
Question
A failure of the pricing system has led to pollution.
Question
Identify the economist who first addressed the environmental problem in terms of externalities.

A)Joseph Schumpeter
B)Maynard Keynes
C)A.C.Pigou
D)J.B.Say
Question
The invention of new mining methods will affect price through the supply side.
Question
Price controls on resources generally lead to surpluses.
Question
One of the conclusions of A.C.Pigou was that

A)a system of mandatory controls is the only effective means to control pollution.
B)a system of charges can be an effective means to control pollution.
C)pollution will wither away if a socialist system is in place.
D)pollution cannot be adequately addressed in a price system.
Question
When a resource is being depleted and becomes scarce, the market's way of encouraging conservation is for the price of the resource to rise, without any government intervention.
Question
Economists use a resource's price as an indicator of its relative scarcity.
Question
Economic theory would lead us to suspect that deep sea oil reserves would be accessed before those located in the Middle East or on the U.S.mainland.
Question
If a depletable resource is selling in a perfectly competitive market, its price will rise by greater and greater dollar amounts each year.
Question
John Maynard Keynes was the author of the book, The Economics of Welfare, which first addressed environmental problems in terms of externalities.
Question
Price controls would ordinarily be used to increase rather than decrease prices of depletable resources.
Question
One of the virtues of rising resource prices is they encourage innovation, especially the discovery of other more abundant resources.
Question
Dwindling resources encourage the development of substitute products.
Question
In a free market the quantity demanded will not exceed the quantity supplied of a resource, even if it is undergoing rapid depletion.
Question
The socialist countries of Eastern Europe have

A)fewer environmental problems than capitalist countries.
B)improved their environment more than the capitalist countries.
C)worse environmental problems than capitalist countries.
D)worsened since the collapse of communism there.
Question
There has been a downward trend in the United States since 1980 in the ambient concentrations of

A)sulfur dioxide.
B)carbon monoxide.
C)lead.
D)all of the above.
Question
Which of the following is an example of detrimental externality?

A)A trailer's entry onto an overcrowded road that delays the movement of other vehicles.
B)Fall in demand for gasoline in the US softens the price of gasoline in the global market.
C)Government investment in energy generation from non-conventional sources.
D)Society devotes huge quantity of its scarce resources for vital innovative activity.
Question
China, the last large communist society,

A)has proved that a command economy has far less pollution problems than capitalist economies.
B)has urban smog levels higher than Los Angeles.
C)has the world's most sophisticated pollution-control devices.
D)has lowered its level of pollution dramatically since 1980.
Question
The environmental problems of China:

A)were caused by a lack of central planning in the economy.
B)were caused by the burning of low-quality, high-sulfur coal.
C)were caused by a lack of pollution controls.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Air quality in most U.S.cities has ____ since World War II.

A)worsened
B)improved
C)remained unchanged
D)improved slightly before a recent deterioration
Question
In Eastern Europe and the countries of the former Soviet Union,

A)grave environmental problems plague Eastern Europe.
B)the area suffers from widespread illness and countless premature deaths.
C)the Aral Sea, once the world's fourth-largest inland sea, is now half its previous size.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Serious environmental problems are

A)unique to industrial economies.
B)unique to Western economies.
C)unique to civilized economies (i.e., those in which people live mainly in cities).
D)None of the above is correct.
Question
Since World War II,

A)air pollution has worsened in most U.S.cities.
B)many new pollutants have been introduced or identified.
C)the federal government has reduced its reliance on economic incentives as a means of reducing pollution.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Some of the newer pollutants that have appeared

A)are far more visible to the eye than older pollution.
B)cause damage that is easily reversible.
C)pose no significant long-term hazards.
D)are far more dangerous than older forms of pollution.
Question
Between 1980 and 2008 recycling in the United States has

A)decreased by less than 2%.
B)increased by less than 2%.
C)doubled.
D)tripled.
Question
Recycling in the United States in recent years

A)has decreased in spite of increased rates for common recycling materials.
B)has remained unchanged, and increased raes for recycling may help.
C)has increased with increased rates for recycling mterials.
D)has increased with no help from increased fees for recycling materials.
Question
Interest in environmental problems has intensified, perhaps because

A)for the first time in history in the 1970s people began to die from pollution-related diseases.
B)rising incomes have caused people to be more concerned with the quality of their lives.
C)the centrally planned economies are polluted.
D)All of the above are true.
Question
Environmentalists, politicians, and economists have different perspectives on what constitutes appropriate environmental policy.Which of the following statements was probably made by an economist?

A)"We take the position that there are rights involved here, rights to be protected from threats to your health, regardless of the costs involved."
B)"Protecting the environment is so important that standards cannot be too high, and continuing improvements must be made regardless of cost."
C)"Pollution is a moral issue that cannot be reduced to dollars and cents."
D)"Clean air and water are things we can buy-if the price is right."
Question
The British economist A.C.Pigou

A)wrote The Economics of Welfare in 1911.
B)offered an explanation of the market economy's poor environmental performance.
C)outlined an approach to environmental policy still in favor with economists today.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Many of the new pollutants to which the world has been subjected are

A)less visible.
B)less malodorous.
C)far more dangerous.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Water quality in the United States has ____ in the past 25 years.

A)improved
B)worsened
C)remained unchanged
D)improved slightly before a recent deterioration
Question
Global warming of the past century, and especially in the past decade, is at least partly a consequence of human activities that have increased ____ in the atmosphere.

A)smog
B)PCBs
C)ozone
D)"greenhouse gases"
Question
Pollution problems

A)have existed for many centuries.
B)are attributable to modern industrialization.
C)can be blamed on the profit system.
D)have worsened in every respect in the past forty years.
Question
What is new about environmental problems today is

A)that for the first time in history we have environmental problems.
B)the increased rate at which air and water pollution is occurring in the United States.
C)the amount of attention the community now gives them.
D)that environmental problems with pollution and garbage disposal have almost completely disappeared.
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Deck 16: Externalities the Environment and Natural Resources
1
In the last three decades, air quality in American cities has improved.
True
2
Pollution is an example of a negative externality.
True
3
Environmental destruction is peculiar to centrally planned economies.
False
4
The production of smoke as a pollutant is a failure of the market system.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
5
Externalities can create a threat to environmental quality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
6
Centrally planned economies like China produce relatively little pollution.
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k this deck
7
If not recycled, an input used in production ultimately winds up as a waste product.
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k this deck
8
Pollution is a relatively new phenomenon.
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k this deck
9
Increasing environmental awareness in the United States has occurred with increasing GDP, which has reduced concerns about basic needs.
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k this deck
10
Recycling rates for aluminum, paper, and glass have been increasing in the United States.
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11
Externalities are benefits or damages conferred upon people who are directly involved in an exchange of a good or service.
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12
Increasing GDP generally causes increases in problems of waste disposal.
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13
Individuals and government have been contributors in harming the environment.
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14
Environmental problems occur exclusively in capitalist economies.
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15
The pricing system has a failure built into it when externalities exist.
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16
The Army Corps of Engineers has been accused of acting on the basis of a so-called "edifice complex."
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17
Basic supply and demand analysis can be used to explain how externalities lead to environmental problems.
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18
Economists believe that externalities can be cured by market methods.
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19
Economists believe it is feasible and desirable to reduce environmental damage to zero.
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k this deck
20
Economists believe that the goal of environmental policy should be zero pollution.
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k this deck
21
Direct controls often require long legal proceedings before they can be effective.
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22
Economists generally consider the use of taxes as the most efficient way of solving pollution problems.
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k this deck
23
Direct controls have traditionally been used heavily to control pollution in the U.S.
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24
When pollution problems arise from a sudden crisis, pollution taxes are a useful form of control.
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k this deck
25
Pollution taxes are preferred to direct controls because they don't require a way of measuring pollutants produced.
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k this deck
26
Direct controls are considered inefficient because all firms are forced to pay the same costs.
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27
When pollution emissions can be measured taxation will tend to be more effective than any other method of controlling pollution.
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k this deck
28
Voluntary programs are dependable ways to protect the environment.
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29
Emissions permits might be called a "license to pollute."
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k this deck
30
One advantage of emissions permits is that they allow the government to choose the level of pollution reduction.
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k this deck
31
Rising prices will discourage consumption and encourage conservation.
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k this deck
32
Voluntary programs, direct controls, and emissions taxes are all equally effective ways of controlling pollution.
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k this deck
33
Although pollution is caused by a failure of the market, many economists believe that the best way to protect the environment is to utilize the price mechanism.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
34
Increasing scarcity of a resource causes new supplies to become more and more costly.
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k this deck
35
Economic theory predicts that the price of a depletable resource will rise as it becomes more scarce.
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k this deck
36
Direct controls have a clear advantage when a total ban is necessary.
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k this deck
37
Taxing pollution will encourage firms to reduce pollutants dumped in the atmosphere or in streams.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
38
Emissions permits allow polluters to pay for the right to pollute a specified amount.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
39
A pollution tax penalizes inefficient firms.
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k this deck
40
Charging firms that emit pollutants is one way to deal with pollution.
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k this deck
41
The worst and most difficult to extract resources are used first.
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k this deck
42
Unexpected discoveries of mineral reserves will ordinarily cause the price of these minerals to increase.
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k this deck
43
Even if demand for a resource grows over time, ever-rising prices of the resource that result from its growing scarcity still discourage consumption.
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k this deck
44
Centrally planned economies are able to cope with environmental pollution issues much better than capitalist countries.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
45
Increased concern about environmental problems derive partly from

A)concerns about increasing economic output.
B)concerns about unemployment and inflation.
C)new awareness that the problems exist.
D)concerns about the quality of life.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
46
Rising prices of resources leads to inefficient resource use by industry.
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k this deck
47
A failure of the pricing system has led to pollution.
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k this deck
48
Identify the economist who first addressed the environmental problem in terms of externalities.

A)Joseph Schumpeter
B)Maynard Keynes
C)A.C.Pigou
D)J.B.Say
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k this deck
49
The invention of new mining methods will affect price through the supply side.
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k this deck
50
Price controls on resources generally lead to surpluses.
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k this deck
51
One of the conclusions of A.C.Pigou was that

A)a system of mandatory controls is the only effective means to control pollution.
B)a system of charges can be an effective means to control pollution.
C)pollution will wither away if a socialist system is in place.
D)pollution cannot be adequately addressed in a price system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
When a resource is being depleted and becomes scarce, the market's way of encouraging conservation is for the price of the resource to rise, without any government intervention.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Economists use a resource's price as an indicator of its relative scarcity.
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k this deck
54
Economic theory would lead us to suspect that deep sea oil reserves would be accessed before those located in the Middle East or on the U.S.mainland.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
If a depletable resource is selling in a perfectly competitive market, its price will rise by greater and greater dollar amounts each year.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
John Maynard Keynes was the author of the book, The Economics of Welfare, which first addressed environmental problems in terms of externalities.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Price controls would ordinarily be used to increase rather than decrease prices of depletable resources.
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k this deck
58
One of the virtues of rising resource prices is they encourage innovation, especially the discovery of other more abundant resources.
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k this deck
59
Dwindling resources encourage the development of substitute products.
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k this deck
60
In a free market the quantity demanded will not exceed the quantity supplied of a resource, even if it is undergoing rapid depletion.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
The socialist countries of Eastern Europe have

A)fewer environmental problems than capitalist countries.
B)improved their environment more than the capitalist countries.
C)worse environmental problems than capitalist countries.
D)worsened since the collapse of communism there.
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Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
There has been a downward trend in the United States since 1980 in the ambient concentrations of

A)sulfur dioxide.
B)carbon monoxide.
C)lead.
D)all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Which of the following is an example of detrimental externality?

A)A trailer's entry onto an overcrowded road that delays the movement of other vehicles.
B)Fall in demand for gasoline in the US softens the price of gasoline in the global market.
C)Government investment in energy generation from non-conventional sources.
D)Society devotes huge quantity of its scarce resources for vital innovative activity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
China, the last large communist society,

A)has proved that a command economy has far less pollution problems than capitalist economies.
B)has urban smog levels higher than Los Angeles.
C)has the world's most sophisticated pollution-control devices.
D)has lowered its level of pollution dramatically since 1980.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
The environmental problems of China:

A)were caused by a lack of central planning in the economy.
B)were caused by the burning of low-quality, high-sulfur coal.
C)were caused by a lack of pollution controls.
D)All of the above are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
Air quality in most U.S.cities has ____ since World War II.

A)worsened
B)improved
C)remained unchanged
D)improved slightly before a recent deterioration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
In Eastern Europe and the countries of the former Soviet Union,

A)grave environmental problems plague Eastern Europe.
B)the area suffers from widespread illness and countless premature deaths.
C)the Aral Sea, once the world's fourth-largest inland sea, is now half its previous size.
D)All of the above are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
Serious environmental problems are

A)unique to industrial economies.
B)unique to Western economies.
C)unique to civilized economies (i.e., those in which people live mainly in cities).
D)None of the above is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Since World War II,

A)air pollution has worsened in most U.S.cities.
B)many new pollutants have been introduced or identified.
C)the federal government has reduced its reliance on economic incentives as a means of reducing pollution.
D)All of the above are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Some of the newer pollutants that have appeared

A)are far more visible to the eye than older pollution.
B)cause damage that is easily reversible.
C)pose no significant long-term hazards.
D)are far more dangerous than older forms of pollution.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Between 1980 and 2008 recycling in the United States has

A)decreased by less than 2%.
B)increased by less than 2%.
C)doubled.
D)tripled.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
Recycling in the United States in recent years

A)has decreased in spite of increased rates for common recycling materials.
B)has remained unchanged, and increased raes for recycling may help.
C)has increased with increased rates for recycling mterials.
D)has increased with no help from increased fees for recycling materials.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Interest in environmental problems has intensified, perhaps because

A)for the first time in history in the 1970s people began to die from pollution-related diseases.
B)rising incomes have caused people to be more concerned with the quality of their lives.
C)the centrally planned economies are polluted.
D)All of the above are true.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
Environmentalists, politicians, and economists have different perspectives on what constitutes appropriate environmental policy.Which of the following statements was probably made by an economist?

A)"We take the position that there are rights involved here, rights to be protected from threats to your health, regardless of the costs involved."
B)"Protecting the environment is so important that standards cannot be too high, and continuing improvements must be made regardless of cost."
C)"Pollution is a moral issue that cannot be reduced to dollars and cents."
D)"Clean air and water are things we can buy-if the price is right."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
The British economist A.C.Pigou

A)wrote The Economics of Welfare in 1911.
B)offered an explanation of the market economy's poor environmental performance.
C)outlined an approach to environmental policy still in favor with economists today.
D)All of the above are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Many of the new pollutants to which the world has been subjected are

A)less visible.
B)less malodorous.
C)far more dangerous.
D)All of the above are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
Water quality in the United States has ____ in the past 25 years.

A)improved
B)worsened
C)remained unchanged
D)improved slightly before a recent deterioration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
Global warming of the past century, and especially in the past decade, is at least partly a consequence of human activities that have increased ____ in the atmosphere.

A)smog
B)PCBs
C)ozone
D)"greenhouse gases"
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Pollution problems

A)have existed for many centuries.
B)are attributable to modern industrialization.
C)can be blamed on the profit system.
D)have worsened in every respect in the past forty years.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
What is new about environmental problems today is

A)that for the first time in history we have environmental problems.
B)the increased rate at which air and water pollution is occurring in the United States.
C)the amount of attention the community now gives them.
D)that environmental problems with pollution and garbage disposal have almost completely disappeared.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
locked card icon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 216 flashcards in this deck.