Evaluating a Policy Intervention in a Community Fishery
Critique the policy described in the case study below. In your evaluation, explain how this policy attempts to address the economic problem that arises when an individual fisher's costs differ from the costs to the community as a whole. Judge the likely success of this policy in solving that specific problem.
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Social Science
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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
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
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A fishing community operates in a shared, unregulated fishing ground. A technological innovation allows each individual fisher to catch fish at a significantly lower personal cost of time and fuel. From an economic perspective that considers the impact on the resource itself, what is the most likely consequence of this innovation?
Port Blossom Fishing Dilemma
The Economics of a Shared Fishery
Analyzing Costs in a Common Fishery
In an unregulated fishery, the social marginal cost of catching an additional fish is equivalent to the cost of resource depletion imposed on all other fishers.
Match each economic term with its correct description in the context of an unregulated, shared fishery.
When an individual fisher's actions in a shared fishing ground reduce the available fish stock for everyone else, this uncompensated cost imposed on others is known as a negative ________.
Arrange the following events in the logical sequence that explains how the difference between individual and total costs in a shared, unregulated fishery leads to over-extraction.
In an unregulated, shared fishery, the cost to society of catching one more fish (social marginal cost) is higher than the direct cost borne by the individual fisher (private marginal cost). Assuming the demand for fish remains constant, which statement accurately analyzes the outcome of this cost difference?
Evaluating Policies for Sustainable Fishing
A fishing community operates in a shared, unregulated fishing ground. A technological innovation allows each individual fisher to catch fish at a significantly lower personal cost of time and fuel. From an economic perspective that considers the impact on the resource itself, what is the most likely consequence of this innovation?
The Economics of a Declining Fishery
Individual Incentives and Collective Outcomes in a Fishery
If each individual fisher in a common fishing ground accurately calculates and minimizes their own personal costs (fuel, time, equipment), the total amount of fish caught by all fishers combined will be at the most economically efficient level for society.
In the context of an unregulated, shared fishing ground, match each economic term with its most accurate description.
Explaining the Cost Gap in Fishing
Evaluating a Policy Intervention in a Community Fishery
Imagine a single fisher operating in a shared, unregulated fishing ground. Arrange the following statements into a logical sequence that illustrates how an individual's cost-benefit calculation leads to a socially inefficient outcome for the entire group.
When an individual fisher in a shared fishing ground calculates their personal costs (e.g., fuel, bait, time), they typically do not account for the cost of depleting the fish stock, which harms all other fishers. This uncounted cost, which causes the total social cost to exceed the individual's private cost, is an economic concept known as a negative ____.
Evaluating Policy Solutions for Overfishing