Designing a Policy for Antibiotic Stewardship
The overuse of antibiotics in agriculture and medicine is leading to a rapid increase in antibiotic-resistant bacteria, a shared public health crisis. Individual farmers or doctors may choose to use antibiotics for short-term gain, even though this contributes to the long-term collective problem. Propose one specific government policy (either a tax or a quota-like system) to address this issue. Briefly explain the mechanism through which your proposed policy would change individual incentives to align them with the public good of preserving antibiotic effectiveness.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economy
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Creation in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Quotas on North Atlantic Cod Fishing
UK Landfill Tax
Strategic Interaction Analysis
Managing a Common Water Resource
A coastal community relies on a shared, open-access fishing ground. In recent years, the fish population has declined sharply due to overfishing, threatening the livelihood of all fishers. Which of the following government interventions best addresses the underlying structure of this problem by directly limiting resource extraction?
Policy Instruments for Environmental Protection
Match each large-scale social dilemma with the government policy best designed to address it by altering individual incentives.
A government aims to reduce traffic congestion in a city center, a problem where individual drivers acting in their own self-interest create collective delays. To achieve this, the government introduces a policy that reduces the tax on gasoline. This policy is an effective way to align individual incentives with the collective goal of reducing congestion.
A government is attempting to reduce industrial air pollution, a problem where the collective cost to public health is not factored into the decisions of individual firms. Four policy options are proposed. Which policy is most likely to be criticized for being economically inefficient by forcing a single solution on all firms, regardless of their unique costs or potential for developing better pollution-reduction methods?
Evaluating Pollution Reduction Policies
Designing a Policy for Antibiotic Stewardship
Evaluating Water Conservation Policies
Policy Instruments for Environmental Protection