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Implementation Challenges of Subsidies for Externalities
Comparing Implementation of Corrective Subsidies and Taxes
Why is it often more practically challenging for a government to implement a subsidy for an activity that generates positive spillovers (e.g., funding for innovative research) compared to implementing a tax on an activity that generates negative spillovers (e.g., a fee per ton of pollutant emitted)?
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economy
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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A government wants to encourage firms to provide advanced skills training to their employees, believing that a more skilled workforce benefits the entire industry, not just the individual firms. To achieve this, the government offers to pay firms a fixed amount for each employee who completes a training program. Which of the following represents the most significant practical challenge in ensuring this policy achieves its intended broad-based benefits?
Analysis of a Workforce Training Subsidy
Evaluating a Government Subsidy Program
Comparing Implementation of Corrective Subsidies and Taxes
Administering a per-unit subsidy to encourage a socially beneficial activity, such as innovative employee training, is generally just as straightforward as administering a per-unit tax on a harmful activity, like industrial pollution, because both interventions primarily involve verifying the quantity of the activity being subsidized or taxed.
A government is considering different policies to encourage activities that produce positive benefits for society. Match each proposed policy with its most likely primary implementation challenge.
The Quality Challenge of Subsidies
A city government wants to encourage activities that provide benefits to the public. Considering the practical challenges of ensuring a policy's intended outcome, which of the following proposed subsidy programs would likely be the most difficult to implement effectively?
Designing a Quality Assurance Mechanism for Subsidies
The 'Green Roofs' Subsidy Program