A) Common resource
B) Private
C) Public
D) Artificially scarce
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) A sweater
B) Bottled water
C) Tap water
D) All of these are goods that are rival in consumption.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) the community agrees to aid in enforcement.
B) the country has the resources to enforce them.
C) the community participates in setting the punishments for breaking them.
D) None of these are true.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) is nonrivalrous.
B) will be undersupplied.
C) is easily excludable.
D) is not socially desirable.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) rival in consumption and excludable.
B) excludable, but not rival in consumption.
C) rival in consumption, but not excludable.
D) neither rival in consumption nor excludable.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) National Defense
B) A library
C) Timber
D) Natural gas
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Multiple Choice
A) whenever the marginal social benefit is positive.
B) in markets for common resources.
C) because the government always acts with altruistic motives.
D) in all markets except those for public goods.
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Multiple Choice
A) Research
B) Orange juice
C) River water
D) Grazing pasture
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Multiple Choice
A) try to force the correction of externalities.
B) must be provided by the government.
C) are not perfect, and total surplus cannot be maximized in these markets.
D) need to be accepted by the affected parties to be effective.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) reflect the real value they place on it.
B) exactly equal the social benefit of the good.
C) not necessarily reflect the real value they place on it.
D) be greater than the social benefit of the good.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Toll roads
B) City buses
C) State colleges
D) National Defense
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the depletion of common resources imposes a negative externality.
B) the problem of overconsumption can be addressed.
C) the socially optimal quantity is not the same as the individual consumer's optimal quantity.
D) All of these are true.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) Consumers demand a higher quantity than they would if they had to pay for what they consumed.
B) Consumers demand a lower quantity than they would if they had to pay for what they consumed.
C) Firms supply a lower quantity than they would if they incurred the full costs of the provision of the good.
D) Firms supply a higher quantity than they would if they had to pay for what they supplied.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) II only
B) I and II only
C) II and III only
D) I, II, and III
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Changing social norms
B) Government regulation of the market
C) Privatization of the good
D) Setting a very specific quota on consumption
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) likelihood of being caught breaking the ban is high.
B) likelihood of being caught breaking the ban is very low.
C) punishment for breaking the ban is severe.
D) public did not participate in setting the punishment for breaking the ban.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) not alter the trade-offs enough to change the consumption patterns of the banned good.
B) increase consumption of the good, exaggerating the problem.
C) still decrease consumption of the good if the price of the good changes.
D) still be effective if it gains enough media attention.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) nonexcludable; both rival and nonexcludable
B) rival; both rival and nonexcludable
C) both rival and nonexcludable; rival
D) both rival and nonexcludable; excludable
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Ban the good
B) Set quotas for the good
C) Government ownership of the good
D) All of these can be effective and efficiency-enhancing solutions.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) allocate the good without government intervention.
B) ensure that the resource is allocated to those with the highest willingness to pay, while quotas do not.
C) are more equitable than quotas.
D) allow the government to set a specific amount of the good to be consumed, while quotas do not.
Correct Answer
verified
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