A municipal government is tasked with resolving a negative externality: severe noise and air pollution in a low-income residential neighborhood caused by a major trucking route that serves several large, politically connected logistics companies. The government's stated goal is to find an economically efficient solution. Which of the following policy decisions would best exemplify an outcome that is efficient but fundamentally unfair due to favoritism towards a more powerful group?
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Evaluating a River Pollution Policy
A government must address pollution from a large, politically influential factory. After analysis, it is determined that the most economically efficient solution—the one that creates the highest overall economic value for society—is for the factory to continue its operations unchanged while nearby residents install air purifiers in their homes. The government implements this policy, mandating that residents must purchase the purifiers at their own expense. Which of the following best describes this policy outcome?
Efficiency, Fairness, and Political Influence in Policymaking
If a government policy designed to address an externality achieves a Pareto-efficient outcome, it can be concluded that the policy is also fair to all parties involved.
Analyzing Policy Fairness
Match each policy scenario with the economic description that best characterizes its outcome.
A government implements a policy to manage agricultural runoff affecting a river. The policy is determined to be the most economically efficient solution, maximizing the total value for both the farms and a downstream luxury resort. However, the policy requires a small, low-income fishing community, which has little political voice, to bear the full cost of water purification. This situation, where an efficient outcome is achieved but the costs are unfairly distributed due to the influence of more powerful groups, is an example of ________.
Evaluating a High-Speed Rail Project Policy
A municipal government is tasked with resolving a negative externality: severe noise and air pollution in a low-income residential neighborhood caused by a major trucking route that serves several large, politically connected logistics companies. The government's stated goal is to find an economically efficient solution. Which of the following policy decisions would best exemplify an outcome that is efficient but fundamentally unfair due to favoritism towards a more powerful group?
Airport Location Policy Evaluation