Environmental Policy for Common-Pool Resources and Public Bads
Environmental policy is a form of public policy designed to resolve problems associated with common-pool resources and public bads, such as pollution and carbon emissions. [1, 12, 13]
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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.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Cap-and-Trade Systems for Emission Control
Local Community Environmental Initiatives
Subsidizing Environmentally Beneficial Investments
International Agreements for Environmental Protection
Government Failures in Environmental Protection
Example of Social Dilemma: Traffic Jams
Government Quotas on North Atlantic Cod
The Polluter Pays Principle
Government Intervention Strategies for Externalities
Persistence of Inefficient and Unfair Economic Outcomes
Restoring Efficiency for Congested Public Goods via Exclusion
Environmental Policy for Common-Pool Resources and Public Bads
Diagnosing and Treating Resource Misallocation: An Economic Analogy
Property Rights as a Framework for Resolving Externalities
Activity: Applying Economic Concepts to Current Events
Asymmetric Information (Hidden Actions and Attributes) as a Source of External Effects
Landfill Tax as a Policy to Reflect Environmental Costs
Positive Externalities: Social vs. Private Benefit
Activity: Analyzing Specific Cases of Market Failure
A large, politically influential corporation operates a factory that pollutes a river, harming a small, economically disadvantaged fishing community downstream. Private negotiations to resolve the issue have failed. A government agency is now evaluating two different intervention strategies:
- A per-unit tax on the pollution emitted by the factory.
- A regulation requiring the factory to install a specific, highly effective (but expensive) water filtration system.
From an economic perspective that considers practical implementation and power dynamics, which statement best analyzes the likely difference between these two policies?
Evaluating Policy Responses to Urban Traffic Congestion
Policy Intervention for Urban Housing Shortage
Analyze each market failure scenario and match it with the most appropriate government or institutional intervention designed to correct the inefficiency.
Evaluating Policy Ineffectiveness
When a government mandates that all factories in a specific industry must install the same type of advanced smoke-scrubbing technology to reduce air pollution, this approach is considered the most economically efficient solution because it ensures a uniform reduction in emissions.
Revitalizing a Historic Downtown
A city government wants to increase the local bee population to improve pollination for public gardens and private fruit trees, a service that benefits the entire community. However, a vocal and well-organized group of residents strongly opposes beekeeping due to fears of bee stings. The city is considering two policies:
- Offering a significant financial subsidy to any resident who establishes and maintains a beehive on their private property.
- Creating a city-managed program to place and maintain a small number of beehives in designated, less-frequented areas of public parks.
Considering the practical challenges and the influence of different interest groups, which statement provides the most insightful analysis of these two options?
To combat the rapid depletion of a specific fish species, a government imposes a regulation that limits each fishing vessel to a maximum weight of fish that can be brought to shore each day. While this policy directly addresses the quantity of fish being harvested, what is a likely unintended consequence that arises from the practical way fishermen might respond to this specific rule?
Unintended Consequences of a Landfill Tax
Role of Technological Progress in Enhancing Environmental Sustainability
Practical and Political Factors in Resolving Externalities
Learn After
Analyzing Pollution Reduction Strategies
Evaluating Carbon Emission Reduction Policies
A new technology is introduced that has the potential to be used in many different parts of the economy. Arrange the following events in the most likely chronological order to show how such a technology leads to a broad increase in a society's living standards.
A coastal town's fishing industry is collapsing due to overfishing, a classic problem of a shared resource being depleted by individual users acting in their own self-interest. Which of the following policy interventions is most likely to create a sustainable fishing environment by aligning the private interests of fishers with the long-term health of the fish population?
Match each environmental problem with the policy instrument best designed to address the underlying market failure.
Differentiating Environmental Policy Approaches
Implementing a government subsidy for each ton of fish caught is an effective policy to combat the over-depletion of a publicly accessible fishing ground.
Evaluating Urban Traffic Congestion Policies
Designing a Municipal Air Quality Policy
A factory's production process releases pollutants into a river, which harms downstream fisheries and recreational areas. To address this negative externality, a government body wants to implement a policy that compels the factory to account for the societal damage it causes in its private cost-benefit decisions. Which of the following policy instruments is specifically designed to achieve this by making the factory 'internalize the externality'?
A coastal town's fishing industry is collapsing due to overfishing, a classic problem of a shared resource being depleted by individual users acting in their own self-interest. Which of the following policy interventions is most likely to create a sustainable fishing environment by aligning the private interests of fishers with the long-term health of the fish population?