Chapter 11
The Tragedy of the Commons for sheep grazing on common land can be eliminated by the government doing each of the following except A. subsidizing sheep flocks B. auctioning off sheep grazing permits C. assigning land property rights D. taxing sheep flcoks
A. subsidizing sheep flcoks
An overcrowded beach is an example of
a Tragedy of the Commons
Goods that are not excludable are usually
free of charge
If the use of a common resource is not regulated,
it will be overused
The free-rider problem exists with
knowledge
Which of the following is not a common resource? A. open grazing land B. national defense C. clean water D. clean air
national defense
A view of a spectacular sunset along a private beach is an example of a
nonrival but excludable good
A congested side street in your neighborhood is
not excludable and rival consumption
When a good is rival in consumption
one person's use of the good diminishes another person's ability to use it
A good is excludable if
people can be prevented from using it
The provision of public goods gives rise to
positive externalities, whereas the use of common resources gives rise to negative externalities
Because of the free-rider problem,
private markets tend to undersupply public goods
A streetlight is a
public good
A free rider is a person who
receives a benefit of a good but avoids paying for it
Without government intervention, public goods tend to be
underproduced and common resources tend to be overconsumed