Evaluating a Market-Based Solution for Traffic Congestion
A city planner, aiming to reduce severe traffic congestion, states: 'By implementing a system where drivers pay a fee to use roads during peak hours, we create a market for road space. This will ensure that only those who value driving the most will use the roads, automatically leading to an efficient reduction in traffic.' Based on your understanding of the conditions required for markets to produce efficient outcomes, identify one potential reason why this new 'market for road space' might still fail to achieve a truly efficient result, and briefly explain your reasoning.
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Economics
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
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Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Evaluating Claims of Market Perfection
A factory produces steel and, in the process, releases pollutants into a nearby river, harming the local fishing industry. The factory does not pay for the damage caused to the fishery. Assuming the steel market is otherwise perfectly competitive, why is the resulting market equilibrium for steel unlikely to be Pareto efficient?
Efficiency in the Used Car Market
A pharmaceutical company holds an exclusive patent for a new life-saving drug, making it the sole provider. The company sets the price for the drug significantly higher than the cost of producing one additional dose. Consequently, some patients who would be willing to pay an amount greater than the production cost are unable to afford the drug. Why is this market outcome considered inefficient?
A pharmaceutical company holds an exclusive patent for a new life-saving drug, making it the sole provider. The company sets the price for the drug significantly higher than the cost of producing one additional dose. Consequently, some patients who would be willing to pay an amount greater than the production cost are unable to afford the drug. Why is this market outcome considered inefficient?
Efficiency of Public Health Measures
The conclusion that a competitive market equilibrium is efficient relies on several key underlying assumptions. When these assumptions are violated, the market outcome is typically inefficient. Match each market scenario below with the specific underlying assumption it violates.
A policymaker argues, 'To solve the problem of overfishing in our nation's shared coastal waters, we should remove all regulations and let the free market operate. Competition among fishing boats will naturally lead to an efficient and sustainable level of fishing.' Which of the following provides the most accurate economic evaluation of this claim?
Evaluating a Market-Based Solution for Traffic Congestion
If a government intervention successfully transforms a market from a monopoly into a perfectly competitive one, the resulting market equilibrium is guaranteed to be Pareto efficient.