A restaurant owner's contract with a new chef specifies salary and working hours. If this contract could also perfectly measure, verify, and reward the exact level of 'culinary creativity' the chef applies, then any resulting boost to the restaurant's profits from the chef's highly creative dishes would be classified as a positive externality.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economics
Economy
CORE Econ
Ch.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
The Labour Discipline Model as an Example of an External Effect
A homeowner hires a landscaping company to maintain their garden. The contract specifies a weekly visit and tasks like mowing the lawn and trimming hedges. However, the contract cannot perfectly detail or monitor the 'thoroughness' of weeding or the 'care' taken to prune delicate plants. The company's workers, to save time, sometimes do a superficial job of weeding, leaving roots behind that cause problems later. Which statement best analyzes the economic reason for the homeowner's future gardening problems?
Historical Land Patterns and Infrastructure
Analyzing Contractual Gaps in a Tech Project
Analysis of a Used Car Transaction
A restaurant owner's contract with a new chef specifies salary and working hours. If this contract could also perfectly measure, verify, and reward the exact level of 'culinary creativity' the chef applies, then any resulting boost to the restaurant's profits from the chef's highly creative dishes would be classified as a positive externality.
Match each economic term with the scenario that best illustrates it. Each scenario involves a transaction where the actions of one party are not fully observable by the other.
Outsourced Customer Support Dilemma
A tech startup hires a freelance programmer to develop a mobile application. The contract specifies the required features and a delivery deadline. However, the 'quality' of the underlying codeāits efficiency, scalability, and ease of future maintenanceāis difficult for the non-technical startup owner to assess and cannot be fully detailed in the contract. The programmer can choose to write 'quick and dirty' code to finish faster or take more time to write high-quality code. Which of the following payment structures would be most effective at encouraging the programmer to write high-quality code, thereby reducing future maintenance costs for the startup?
Designing a Scenario of Contractual Failure
The Car Insurance Conundrum