A) The impact of William's activity on the bystander is adverse, and William compensates the bystander accordingly.
B) The impact of William's activity on the bystander is adverse, but William fails to compensate the bystander.
C) The impact of William's activity on the bystander is beneficial and the bystander compensates William accordingly.
D) Externalities arise in all of the above cases.
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Multiple Choice
A) an amount less than $100
B) an amount between $100 and $250
C) an amount between $250 and $350
D) Any amount could result in both parties benefiting from the agreement.
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Multiple Choice
A) has no need for government intervention.
B) would benefit from a tax on the product.
C) would benefit from a subsidy for the product.
D) would maximize total well-being at Q3.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) externalize the positive externality.
B) externalize the negative externality.
C) internalize the positive externality.
D) internalize the negative externality.
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Multiple Choice
A) social cost
B) opportunity cost of technology
C) internalization of an externality
D) technology spillover
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Multiple Choice
A) less than is socially desirable.
B) more than is socially desirable.
C) exactly the quantity that is socially desirable.
D) less than the same market would produce in the presence of a positive externality.
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Multiple Choice
A) The marginal benefit of the positive externality is measured by P3 - P1.
B) The marginal cost of the negative externality is measured by P3 - P2.
C) The marginal cost of the negative externality is measured by P3 - P1.
D) The marginal cost of the negative externality is measured by P3 - P0.
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Multiple Choice
A) encourages a private solution to a particular positive-externality problem.
B) discourages a private solution to a particular positive-externality problem.
C) encourages a private solution to a particular negative-externality problem.
D) discourages a private solution to a particular negative-externality problem.
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Multiple Choice
A) can keep private parties from solving externality problems.
B) are incurred in the production process due to externalities.
C) increase when taxes are imposed to correct negative externalities.
D) are eliminated when the government intervenes in a market with externalities.
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Multiple Choice
A) negative externality.
B) positive externality.
C) subsidy.
D) producer surplus.
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Multiple Choice
A) $67
B) $68
C) $81
D) $83
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Multiple Choice
A) self-interest.
B) moral codes and social sanctions.
C) charity.
D) normal market adjustments.
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Multiple Choice
A) subsidies to education
B) maximum levels of pollution that factories may emit
C) tradable pollution permits
D) None of the above is an example of a command-and-control policy.
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Multiple Choice
A) subsidies
B) Pigovian taxes
C) tradable pollution permits
D) None of the above is an example of a command-and-control policy.
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Multiple Choice
A) are effective under all conditions.
B) will usually allocate resources efficiently if private parties can bargain without cost.
C) are only efficient when there are negative externalities.
D) may not be possible because of the distribution of property rights.
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Multiple Choice
A) They are equal.
B) The equilibrium quantity is greater than the socially optimal quantity.
C) The equilibrium quantity is less than the socially optimal quantity.
D) There is not enough information to answer the question.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Firm B will spend $3,500.
B) Firm A will spend $4,000.
C) Firm A will spend $4,500.
D) Firm B will spend $3,000.
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Short Answer
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Short Answer
Correct Answer
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