Economics Today The Macro View Ch.5 Public Spending and Public Choice
Market system
run by proportional rule
______ ______ for public schools do not necessarily translate into improved student performance.
Bigger subsidies
Transfer payments transfers in kind
Income redistribution includes progressive income tax system and transfers: (name 2)
Externality (external cost)
A consequence of an economic activity that spills over to affect third parties. Pollution is an _____?
The French government recently allocated the equivalent of more than $120 million in public funds to Quaero (Latin for "I search"), an Internet search engine analogous to Google or Yahoo. Is a publicly funded Internet search engine a public good or a government sponsored good? A. It is a public good, unlikley to be provided in the private market. B. It is a public good, deemed socially desirable through the political process. C. It is a government sponsored good, deemed socially desirable through the political process. D. It is a government sponsored good, deemed politically desirable through the political process.
B. It is a public good, deemed socially desirable through the political process.
Majority rule
Collective decision making, with decisions based on more than 50 percent
Private goods
Good that can be consumed by only one individual at a time. Private goods are subject to the principle of rival consumption.
Property rights
The rights of an owner to use and to exchange property.
Incentive structure
The system of rewards and punishments individuals face with respect to their actions
______ __ ________ ________ the study of collective decision making. Assumes that individuals will act within the political process to maximize their individual (not collective) well-being.
Theory of public choice
Political system is run by ______ rule Market system is run by ______ rule
majority proportional
Goods are deemed socially desirable.
merit
Political system
run my majority rule
An increase in input prices shifts the supply curve? up and to the left
up and to the left
In many countries, education is either wholly provided by the government or is heavily subsidized. How would an economist explain this? A. Since education has a spillover benefit, private markets will under provide for it. B. Education is a pure public good and those who do not pay cannot be excluded from it. C. Individuals will not purchase education because they do not benefit from it. D. Since education has a spillover cost, private markets will over provide for it. E. The only way to provide education is through a government-sponsored system.
A. Since education has a spillover benefit, private markets will under provide for it.
Much of our legal system is involved with defining and protecting property rights. A. True B. False
A. True
The goal of antitrust legislation is to reduce the power of firms that can determine the market price of the goods they sell. A. True B. False
A. True
Pollution produced by a factory is being dumped into a local river. The community uses local funds to clean the river. This is an example of A. an external cost as the community, not the factory, is paying for the clean up. B. an external benefit since it creates jobs in environmental science. C. a public good. D. an effluent fee because it is as if the factory is taxing the community.
A. an external cost as the community, not the factory, is paying for the clean up.
The government of country B is more heavily involved in the economy through economic functions rather than political functions because it devotes a higher fraction of its budget toward A. efforts to affect the way exchange is carried out. B. the discouragement of goods that are deemed socially undesirable. C. the encouragement of goods that are deemed socially desirable. D. activities that are subjective rather than objective.
A. efforts to affect the way exchange is carried out.
A cost or benefit of an economic activity that has an impact on an individual's well-being, even though the individual was not directly involved in the activity, is known as a(n) A. externality. B. free-rider. C. capital loss. D. public good.
A. externality.
A government agency is contemplating launching an effort to expand the scope of its activities. One rationale for doing so is that another government agency might make the same effort and, if successful, receive larger budget allocation in future years. Another rationale for expanding the agency's activities is that this will make the jobs of its workers more interesting, which may help the agency attract better-qualified employees. Nevertheless, to broaden its legal mandate, the agency will have to convince more than half of the House of Representatives and the Senate to approve a formal proposal to expand its activities. In addition, to expand its activities, the agency must have the authority to force private companies it does not currently regulate to be officially licensed by agency personnel. The behavior of the government agency is similar to a profit-seeking private enterprise in all of the following aspects, except A. the government agency depends on majority rule to enact the changes that it is seeking. B. the government agency is promoting competition. C. the government agency attempts to increase its budgetary allocations. D. the government agency attempts to make its workers' jobs more interesting.
A. the government agency depends on majority rule to enact the changes that it is seeking.
Market failure occurs because A. the market system does not make individuals responsible for the social costs/benefits of their actions. B. the market system does not make individuals responsible for the private costs/benefits of their actions. C. the market system forces individuals to consider the social and private consequences of their actions. D. the market system forces individuals to consider the social consequences of their actions.
A. the market system does not make individuals responsible for the social costs/benefits of their actions.
Money payments made by governments to individuals for which no services or goods are concurrently rendered are known as A. transfer payments. B. demerit payments. C. merit payments. D. black market payments.
A. transfer payments.
After a government implements a voucher program, granting funds that families can spend at schools of their choice, numerous students in public schools switch to private schools. Parents' and students' valuations of the services provided at both private and public schools adjust to equality with the true market price of educational services. As a result of this voucher program, A. the public schools and the private schools will gain equally. B. the public schools will gain. C. the public schools will lose. D. the parents of these school children will lose.
C. the public schools will lose.
Which of the following government policies might be effective in achieving the amount of orange production that fully reflects all social costs? A. A tax on growers commensurate with the cost to third parties. B. Government financing or production of oranges. C. Regulations that limit the use of pesticides. D. Both A and C are viable policies. E. Both A and B are viable policies.
D. Both A and C are viable policies.
Which of the following is not a difference between market and collective decision making? A. Money payments can signal intensity of desire for a product, but voting cannot. B. Government goods are often provided free of charge, while market goods have a price. C. The government can use expropriation to extract payments, but private firms cannot. D. Government goods are costless to produce, while private goods have production costs.
D. Government goods are costless to produce, while private goods have production costs.
According to the theory of public choice, the employees of Kodak and employees of the State of Washington should act differently because A. public employees act to maximize collective welfare rather than individual welfare. B. private employees are motivated only by money. C. public employees cannot be fired while private employees can. D. the incentives facing them are different.
D. the incentives facing them are different.
Most private goods ________ rival in consumption, and most public goods ________ rival in consumption. A. are not; are B. are; are C. are not; are not D. are; are not
D. are; are not
Spending of dollars can indicate intensity of want. Votes cannot indicate intensity of want; each vote counts with the same intensity.
Difference between market and collective decision making VOTING VS SPENDING
Voting versus spending
Differences between market and collective decision making: ___ Vs ____
know and must bear the true opportunity cost of their actions.
In a pure market system, competition generates economic efficiency only when individuals
___________ _________ Rewards and punishments affect provision of government goods.
Incentive structures
Suppose Canada spends less per capita on national defense than many other countries of similar size and income. A reasonable economic explanation would be that A. Canadians perceive national defense as generating external costs rather than as a public good. B. Canada is able to free-ride on the defense spending of the United States. C. Canada's tax system is less efficient than other industrial nations. D. national defense is not a public good in Canada.
B. Canada is able to free-ride on the defense spending of the United States.
The most common provider of public goods is the private sector. A. True B. False
B. False
Which of the following is an example of a transfer in kind? A. Social Security. B. Food stamps C. Disability benefits D. Unemployment insurance benefits
B. Food stamps
Does an Internet search engine satisfy the key characteristics of a public good? A. Yes, because it can be used by many people simultaneously at some additional opportunity cost, and it would be impossible to exclude users. B. No, it has the characteristic of non minus rivalrous consumption, but advertisers can excluded and be made to pay nothing. C. No, because the principle of rival consumption applies but users could be excluded. D. Yes, because the principle of rival consumption does not apply and it would be too costly to exclude users.
B. No, it has the characteristic of non minus rivalrous consumption, but advertisers can excluded and be made to pay nothing.
Which one of the following is a primary difference between a public good and a private good? A. Private goods are manufactured because of the workings of the price system while public goods come about through antitrust legislation. B. Private goods are subject to the principle of rival consumption while public goods are not. C. A private good is subject to the free-rider problem while a public good is not. D. Private goods are purchased by money transfers while public goods are purchased by in-kind transfers.
B. Private goods are subject to the principle of rival consumption while public goods are not.
All of the following are goals established by the Full-Employment Act of 1946 except A. price stability. B. a balanced budget. C. economic growth. D. full employment.
B. a balanced budget.
All of the following are goals established by the Full-Employment Act of 1946 except A. price stability. B. a balanced budget. C. economic growth. D. full employment.
B. a balanced budget.
A good that has been deemed socially desirable through the political process is known as A. a free-rider. B. a merit good. C. a positive externality. D. a demerit good
B. a merit good. (aka) Government-sponsored good
Suppose that the U.S. government determines that cigarette smoking creates social costs not reflected in the current market price and equilibrium quantity of cigarettes. A study has recommended that the government can correct for the externality effect of cigarette consumption by paying farmers not to plant tobacco used to manufacture cigarettes. It also recommends raising the funds to make these payments by increasing taxes on cigarettes. These actions by the government lead to all the following outcomes, except A. a leftward shift of the supply curve of tobacco. B. an increase in the negative externality caused by cigarette smoking. C. a reduction in the negative externality caused by cigarette smoking. D. a leftward shift of the supply curve of cigarettes.
B. an increase in the negative externality caused by cigarette smoking.
Other than correcting externalities, other economic functions of government include A. Deciding what to produce, how to produce it and for whom to produce for all sectors of the economy. B. providing a legal system, allocating public goods, promoting competition, and stabilizing the economy. C. deciding which states may or may not impose income taxes, charge fees and enforce contracts. D. income redistribution and the regulation and provision of merit and demerit goods.
B. providing a legal system, allocating public goods, promoting competition, and stabilizing the economy.
The study of collective decision making, or the process through which voters, politicians and other interested parties influence nonmarket choices is known as A. a private choice theory. B. public choice theory. C. antitrust legislation. D. the exclusion principle.
B. public choice theory.
Market failure occurs when A. the market system fails to allocate an equal share of resources to all individuals. B. the unrestrained market economy leads to too few or too many resources going to a specific economic activity. C. the market system fails to allocate resources to each individual according to their abilities. D. the market system fails to allocate resources to each individual according to their needs.
B. the unrestrained market economy leads to too few or too many resources going to a specific economic activity.
A true public good must be provided by the government. Which of the following goods provided by the government is a true public good? A. Postal service. B. Highways where tolls are collected. C. Flood control. D. Tax collection.
C. Flood control.
Antitrust legislation
Laws that restrict the formation of monopolies and regulate certain anticompetitive business practices.
Antitrust legislation Monopoly power
Market failure may occur if markets are not competitive
__________encourages people to consume medical services that are low in per-unit value relative to the cost.
Medicare
Payments that are in the form of goods and services.
Transfer in kind Examples: food stamps, subsidized public housing, and medical care
Money payments (terms) made by governments to individuals for which no services or goods are rendered in return.
Transfer payment Examples: Social Security old age and disability benefits and unemployment insurance benefits
Redistributing income give 2 examples
Transfer payments In-kind transfers
_____ ______ ______ how voters, politicians, and other interested parties act and how these actions influence nonmarket decisions.
collective decision making
The last unit of educational services provided is likely to ____ _____ _____ __ ______ by parents and students.
cost more than its valuation by parents and students
Goods are deemed socially undesirable.
demerit
the services provided _____ _____ _____ _____ to promoting student learning. exceed those best suited to promoting student learning
exceed those best suited
It is difficult to charge for a public good based on consumption; this is called the _____ _____ .
exclusion principle
The economic activities of government include (1) correcting for _____, (2) providing a _____, (3) promoting _____, (4) producing _____ goods, and (5) ensuring _____. The principle of _____ does not apply to public goods as it does to private goods.
externalities, legal system, competition, public, economywide stability rival consumption
Public
goods are not subject to rival consumption
How the Government can correct positive externalities? Give 3 examples
government financing and production subsidies regulations
A ______ ______ is a cost that is suffered by a third party as a result of an economic transaction.
negative externality
Public goods have two characteristics: (1) Once they are produced, there is no additional _____ when additional consumers use them, because your use of a public good does not deprive others of its simultaneous use; and (2) consumers cannot conveniently be _____ on the basis of use.
opportunity cost charged
When there are external costs, the market will tend to _________resources to the production of the good or service in question
overallocate
Externalities can also be _____.
positive
Market failure
prevent the price system from attaining economic efficiency and individual freedom.
In its most ideal form, a _____ _____ allows resources to move from lower-valued to higher-valued uses through voluntary exchange.
price system
Goods are subject to rival consumption.
private
Similarities and differences with market system structures. 1. ____ and _____ are ______. 2. ____ ______ and _______ are _______ .
scarcity; competition; similarities. Legal coercion; majority rule; differences.
Negative externalities, at least two avenues are open to the government. Name 2 examples special taxes and legislative regulation or prohibition
special taxes and legislative regulation or prohibition
Monopoly
A firm that can determine the market price of a good. In the extreme case, a monopoly is the only seller of a good or service.
Government inhibited goods
A good that has been deemed socially undesirable through the political process. • Certain psychoactive drugs i.e. heroin
Market Failure
A situation in which the market economy leads to too few or too many resources going to a specific economic activity.
Subsidies
another term for negative tax
Free riders
anticipate that others will pay
Externalities
are examples of market failures.
______ _____ problem arises when some individuals take advantage of the fact that others will take on the burden of paying for public goods. free rider
Free rider
government political goods
Goods (and services) provided by the public sector (2)
Government sponsored goods
Goods deemed socially desirable through the political process: (hint: museums)
Differences between market and collective decision making (give 3 examples)
Government goods at zero price Use of force Voting versus spending
_____ ______ all federal, state, and local spending. give examples:
Government outlays • Defense, income security, and Social Security—at the federal level • Education, health and hospitals, and public welfare—at the state level
In the absence of a government-subsidized health plan, the equilibrium price of MRI tests is $500 and the amount of society's total spending on MRI tests is $___million. Suppose that the government establishes a health plan guaranteeing that all qualified participants can purchase MRI tests at an effective price (that is, out-of-pocket cost) to the individual of $100 per test. In this case people will consume ___MRI tests. The per-unit price that induces producers to provide the amount of MRI tests demanded at the government guaranteed price of $100 is $___and society's total spending on MRI tests becomes $___million. Under the government's coverage of MRI tests, the per-unit subsidy it provides is $__ and the total subsidy that the government pays to support MRI testing at its guaranteed price is $___million.
$500 $40 100,000 $700 $70 $600 (the difference between the supply price & gov't prince). $60
Effluent fee
A charge to a polluter that gives the right to discharge into the air or water a certain amount of pollution; also called a pollution tax.
Externality
A consequence of an economic activity that spills over to affect third parties. Pollution is externality.
Subsidizing medical services through Medicare A. makes medical services available to a large percentage of the population, who otherwise could not afford them. B. drives a wedge between the price received by providers and the price perceived by consumers. C. is a relatively low percentage of U.S. GDP compared to other nations. D. All of the above are true. E. Only A and B are true.
E. Only A and B are true.
In a small town, a paper mill produces water pollution. If the government does not intervene, the equilibrium price of paper will be __________, and the equilibrium quantity of paper will be __________. A. greater than the socially optimal price, greater than the socially optimal quantity B. equal to the socially optimal price, equal to the socially optimal quantity C. greater than the socially optimal price, less than the socially optimal quantity D. less than the socially optimal price, less than the socially optimal quantity E. less than the socially optimal price, greater than the socially optimal quantity The government could best correct this externality by_____.
E. less than the socially optimal price, greater than the socially optimal quantity taxing the production of paper.
Since the 1960s, public spending on education has _________, while student performance has ______________. A. decreased, remained constant or increased B. decreased, remained constant or increased C. decreased, decreased D. increased, increased E. increased, remained constant or declined
E. increased, remained constant or declined
____ _____ arises when all mutually advantageous trades have taken place.
Economic efficiency
The steel mill doesn't have to pay the cost of dirtying the air. Rather, it is the people in the community who incur that cost in the form of dirtier clothes, dirtier cars and houses, and more respiratory illnesses is an example of
Externality ( external cost)
Third parties
Parties who are not directly involved in a given activity or transaction.
_____ ______ is a benefit that is enjoyed by a third-party as a result of an economic transaction.
Positive externality
_____ _____ can be used by more and more people at no additional opportunity cost.
Public goods
_______ lead to a higher quantity of the medical services consumed.
Subsidies
Proportional rule
With 10 percent of "dollar votes" cast for blue cars, 10 percent of the output is blue