Analyzing Producer Loss from a Corrective Tax
A firm's production creates a negative externality. To correct this, a government imposes a per-unit tax that successfully reduces the firm's output to a new, lower level. Deconstruct the total financial loss experienced by the firm by identifying the two distinct sources of this loss.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economy
Economics
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
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Comparing Pollution Reduction Policies
A government wants to reduce pollution from a chemical plant to a specific, lower level. It considers two policies that will achieve the exact same reduction in pollution:
- A tax levied on each ton of pollution the plant emits.
- A regulation that sets a strict limit (a quota) on the total tons of pollution the plant is allowed to emit.
Assuming both policies achieve the identical environmental outcome, which statement best analyzes the primary difference in their financial consequences?
Financial Impacts of Environmental Policies
Assuming a production quota and a per-unit tax are designed to achieve the exact same reduction in a firm's output, the total negative impact on the firm's profit will be identical under both policies.
Producer Preference for Environmental Policies
A government is deciding between two policies to reduce pollution from a factory, both designed to achieve the exact same level of environmental improvement: a per-unit tax on pollution or a strict limit (quota) on the amount of pollution allowed. Match each stakeholder group with the financial outcome they would experience under the specified policy.
A government aims to correct a negative externality by reducing a firm's output from an initial level to a specific, lower target level. It can achieve this target by either imposing a per-unit tax or by setting a production quota. Assuming both policies result in the exact same final output level, why is the total financial loss to the firm greater under the tax policy compared to the quota policy?
A government wants to reduce the output of a good that generates a negative externality. It can achieve the socially optimal level of output by using either a per-unit tax or a production quota. Assuming both policies are perfectly calibrated to reach the exact same, socially optimal output level, how do they compare in terms of overall economic efficiency (i.e., total social surplus)?
Analyzing Producer Loss from a Corrective Tax
Policy Recommendation for Pollution Control