Econ Midterm 2
If the supply curve is S, the demand curve is D, and the equilibrium price is $100, what is the producer surplus?
$2500
Consider the town of Springfield with only three residents, Sophia, Amber, and Cedric. The three residents are trying to determine how large, in acres, they should build the public park. The following table shows each resident's willingness to pay for each acre of the park. Suppose the cost to build the park is $24 per acre and that the residents have agreed to split the cost of building the park equally. If the residents vote to determine the size of park to build, basing their decision solely on their own willingness to pay (and trying to maximize their own surplus), what is the largest park size for which the majority of residents would vote "yes?"
2 acres
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has determined that the probability of a worker dying from exposure to a hazardous chemical used in the production of fertilizer is 0.008. The cost of imposing a regulation that would ban the chemical is $31 million. If the value of a human life is equal to $8 million, how many people must the policy affect in order for the benefits to exceed the costs?
485
Governments can improve market outcomes for
Both public goods and common resources
When the price falls from P2 to P1, producer surplus
Decreases by an amount equal to A+B
A television broadcast is an example of a good that is
Not rival in consumption
Which of the following is usually true about government-provided goods?
People do not have to pay an explicit fee to enjoy these goods
Suppose the government imposes a tax of (P'-P'''). The area measured by K+L represents
Tax revenue
At Q3
The marginal consumer values this product less than the social cost of producing it
What happens to the total surplus in a market when the government imposes a tax?
Total surplus decreases
Which of the following is not a typical solution to the "Tragedy of the Commons?"
Turning the common resource into a club good
A free rider is a person who
receives only the benefit of a good but avoids paying for it
You are offered a free ticket to see the Chicago Cubs play the Chicago White Sox at Wrigley Field. Assume the ticket has no resale value. Willie Nelson is performing on the same night, and his concert is your next-best alternative activity. Tickets to see Willie Nelson cost $40. On any given day, you would be willing to pay up to $50 to see and hear Willie Nelson perform. Assume there are no other costs of seeing either event. Based on this information, at a minimum, how much would you have to value seeing the Cubs play the White Sox to accept the ticket and go to the game?
$10
Two firms, A and B, each currently emit 100 tons of chemicals into the air. The government has decided to reduce the pollution and from now on will require a pollution permit for each ton of pollution emitted into the air. The government gives each firm 40 pollution permits, which it can either use or sell to the other firm. It costs Firm A $200 for each ton of pollution that it eliminates before it is emitted into the air, and it costs Firm B $100 for each ton of pollution that it eliminates before it is emitted into the air. After the two firms buy or sell pollution permits from each other, we would expect that Firm A will emit
20 fewer tons of pollution into the air, and Firm B will emit 100 fewer tons of pollution into the air
Flu shots provide a positive externality. Suppose that the market for the vaccinations is perfectly competitive. Without government intervention in the vaccination market, which of the following statements is correct?
At the current output level, the marginal social benefit exceeds the marginal private benefit
If the government were to limit the release of air pollution produced by a glue factory to 75 parts per million, the policy would be considered a
Command-and-control policy
Which of the following statements is not correct?
Corrective taxes set the maximum quantity of pollution, whereas tradable pollution permits fix the price of pollution
In which of the following cases is the Coase theorem most likely to solve the externality?
Ed is allergic to his roommate's cat
Erin would be willing to pay as much as $100 per week to have her house cleaned. Ernesto's opportunity cost of cleaning Erin's house is $70 per week. Assume Erin is required to pay a tax of $40 when she hires someone to clean her house for a week. Which of the following is correct?
Erin will now clean her own house
The demand curve for gasoline slopes downward and the supply curve for gasoline slopes upward. The production of the 200th gallon of gasoline entails the following: -a private cost of $3.03 -a social cost of $3.23 -a value to consumers of $3.39 The production of the 200th gallon of gas entails an:
External cost of $0.20
Ashlyn installed a wooden sculpture in her front yard. A positive externality arises if the sculpture
Increases the value of other properties in the neighborhood
On hot summer days, electricity-generating capacity is sometimes stretched to the limit. At these times, electric companies may ask people to voluntarily cut back on their use of electricity. An economist would suggest that
It would be more efficient if the electric company raised its rates for electricity at peak times
The Pennsylvania Turnpike is a tolled freeway running through the state of Pennsylvania. Motorists must pay tolls at various points along the Turnpike based on the distance they traveled on the freeway. Suppose that despite the tolls, many motorists in the urban areas use the Turnpike causing traffic to slow during peak times. What type of good would the Turnpike be classified as in this case?
Private good
If a sawmill creates too much noise for local residents,
The government can raise economic well-being through noise-control regulations
Which of the following is a disadvantage of government provision of a public good?
The government lacks information about the value people place on the good
Which of the following will cause a decrease in consumer surplus?
The imposition of a binding price floor in the market
The maximum price that a buyer will pay for a good is called
Willingness to pay