A factory's operations cause $1,000 per week in damages to a downstream farm. The factory can eliminate this pollution at a cost of $700 per week. Assume there are no costs associated with negotiation. If the factory has the legal right to pollute, the parties will negotiate, and the farm will pay the factory to eliminate the pollution. Which statement best analyzes the outcome if the property rights were reversed, giving the farm the legal right to clean water instead?
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Ch.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Unfair Distributional Outcome: Fishermen Pay for Pollution Reduction
Granting Water Rights to Fishermen as an Implementation of the Polluter-Pays Principle
Bargaining Outcomes and Property Rights
A policymaker proposes replacing universally free primary education with a voucher system that only covers the full cost of schooling for low-income families. They argue, "This is more efficient. It targets resources to those who truly need them and stops subsidizing families who can already afford to pay." From an economic perspective that views primary education as having benefits for society as a whole, what is the primary weakness in this policymaker's argument?
A factory's operations cause $1,000 per week in damages to a downstream farm. The factory can eliminate this pollution at a cost of $700 per week. Assume there are no costs associated with negotiation. If the factory has the legal right to pollute, the parties will negotiate, and the farm will pay the factory to eliminate the pollution. Which statement best analyzes the outcome if the property rights were reversed, giving the farm the legal right to clean water instead?
Distributional Effects of Legal Entitlements
Distributional Effects of Legal Entitlements
Property Rights and Distributional Outcomes
A chemical plant's operations create a foul odor that negatively affects a nearby residential community. The total value the community places on eliminating the odor is $500,000. The plant can install a special filtration system to eliminate the odor at a cost of $300,000. Assuming the parties can negotiate without any cost, what is the most likely outcome if the law initially grants the plant the right to emit the odor?
In a situation with a harmful externality that can be resolved through private negotiation without transaction costs, the initial assignment of property rights determines which party bears the cost of reaching the efficient outcome, but it does not change the efficient outcome itself.
Airport Noise and Property Rights: An Evaluation
A professional musician and a freelance writer are neighbors in an apartment building. The musician's daily trumpet practice generates noise that costs the writer $150 per day in lost productivity. The musician can eliminate the noise by purchasing a professional-grade mute at a cost of $50. The writer can eliminate the noise by installing soundproofing in their office at a cost of $90. Assume the two parties can negotiate costlessly.
Which of the following statements accurately analyzes the difference in the writer's daily financial outcome depending on the initial assignment of rights?