Analysis of a Government Subsidy Program
A government is considering a new bill that would provide a $500 million subsidy exclusively to the country's 10,000 large-scale corn farmers. The cost of this program would be spread across all 100 million taxpayers. A well-funded lobbying group representing the corn farmers argues the subsidy is crucial for national food security. Despite economic analyses suggesting the subsidy is inefficient and will raise overall food costs slightly for consumers, the bill passes with broad political support. Most voters are either unaware of the bill or know very little about its specific economic impact. Using your understanding of voter behavior and political processes, analyze why this economically inefficient bill was likely passed.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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Analysis of a Government Subsidy Program
A government passes a complex piece of legislation that provides a large subsidy to a small, highly-organized group of producers. The cost of this subsidy is spread thinly across all taxpayers, resulting in a very small, almost unnoticeable tax increase for each individual. Despite independent analysis showing the policy is economically inefficient for the country as a whole, it faces little public opposition and is successfully passed. Which of the following best explains this outcome?
The Link Between Voter Apathy and Inefficient Policy
Concentrated Benefits vs. Dispersed Costs
A city government is repeatedly approving zoning changes that greatly increase the property value for a few large developers but create significant traffic congestion for the thousands of residents in the surrounding area. A civic group believes this is happening because most residents are not aware of the long-term negative impacts of each individual zoning change. The group proposes several initiatives to address this. Which of the following initiatives would likely be the LEAST effective at preventing these inefficient zoning changes from being approved?
A government policy that benefits a small special interest group at the expense of the general public will almost certainly be overturned if independent economists publish a report clearly detailing the policy's inefficiency and high costs. This is because the primary cause of the policy's existence—voter ignorance—has been eliminated.
Match each political-economic phenomenon with the principle that best explains its role in leading to inefficient government outcomes.
A proposed piece of legislation offers large, direct benefits to a specific industry while spreading the costs thinly across the entire population. Arrange the following events in the logical order that explains how this economically inefficient policy could be enacted due to voter behavior.
A government watchdog group is concerned about 'pork-barrel' projects being added to a large infrastructure bill. These projects provide concentrated benefits to specific electoral districts but their costs are spread thinly across all taxpayers, making them inefficient from a national perspective. The group wants to propose a reform to mitigate this problem. Which of the following proposals most directly addresses the underlying voter behavior that allows such projects to be approved?
A politician defends a new government program that provides large financial grants to a handful of tech startups. The cost of the program is funded by a tiny, almost unnoticeable increase in the national sales tax. When a critic calls the program an inefficient use of public funds, the politician responds, "The public has not voiced any opposition to this program, which clearly indicates their widespread approval. I am simply carrying out the will of the people." What is the most significant flaw in the politician's justification?