A key analytical simplification in externality models is the assumption of quasi-linear preferences. This assumption implies that an individual's willingness to pay to avoid a marginal unit of an externality does not change with their level of ____, which in turn prevents the social cost curve from shifting when wealth is redistributed.
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An economist is modeling a negative externality where a chemical plant's pollution harms a downstream fishery. To simplify the analysis, the economist assumes the fishery owners have quasi-linear preferences. What is the most significant analytical consequence of this assumption for finding the single, socially optimal level of chemical production?
In economic models of externalities, the conclusion that a competitive firm's profit-maximizing output level is Pareto-inefficient is only valid if one assumes the affected parties have quasi-linear preferences.
Impact of Wealth Transfers on Social Cost Curves
In the context of modeling economic externalities, match each concept or assumption with its most accurate description.
The Trade-off of Simplicity in Externality Modeling
A key analytical simplification in externality models is the assumption of quasi-linear preferences. This assumption implies that an individual's willingness to pay to avoid a marginal unit of an externality does not change with their level of ____, which in turn prevents the social cost curve from shifting when wealth is redistributed.
Arrange the following statements into a logical sequence that explains why the assumption of quasi-linear preferences is useful for identifying a single, unique efficient outcome in a diagrammatic model of an externality.
Evaluating a Uniform Policy Recommendation
An economist is analyzing the negative externality of a factory's air pollution on a nearby residential community. Through surveys, the economist discovers that as the community's average household income increases, their collective willingness to pay for a one-ton reduction in emissions also increases. What is the primary implication of this finding for a standard graphical model that assumes quasi-linear preferences to identify a single, efficient level of production?