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Multiple Choice

An economist is studying the local market for wheat. They find hundreds of independent farms selling wheat to numerous buyers. The wheat from one farm is indistinguishable from the wheat from any other farm. Prices are publicly quoted and change based on overall supply and demand, with no single farm able to set its own price. However, the economist discovers that a new government program provides exclusive, non-public reports on future weather patterns to a small, select group of the largest farms. How does this new information asymmetry affect the market's alignment with the ideal conditions described in economic theory?

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Updated 2025-09-08

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