Evaluating Private Provision of Community Goods
Based on the scenario provided, which privately-operated project is likely to result in a smaller overall loss of economic efficiency for society? Justify your choice by analyzing the nature of each good and the mechanisms a private operator could use to manage them.
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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
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Evaluating Private Provision of Community Goods
Evaluating a Sole Proprietor's Decision-Making
A private firm is deciding between two projects: operating a scenic toll road that can get congested during peak hours, or providing a city-wide mosquito control program that benefits everyone regardless of payment. From an economic perspective, why is the market failure and resulting social loss likely to be less severe if the firm chooses to operate the toll road instead of the mosquito control program?
Comparing Market Failures for Different Goods
Comparing Market Failures for Different Goods
The social loss from the private provision of a good is lower for a congestible good (like a busy park) than for a pure public good (like national defense) primarily because the private provider of the congestible good has a natural incentive to set a price that perfectly aligns with the marginal social cost of congestion.
A private company owns a large, scenic park that becomes unpleasantly crowded during holiday weekends. To address this, the company decides to charge an entrance fee. From the perspective of economic efficiency, which statement best evaluates the impact of this fee on the social loss associated with the park's provision?
A city council is debating whether to transfer the operation of two public services to private firms: (1) the city's street lighting system, and (2) a popular public beach that becomes extremely crowded on sunny days. An economist advises the council that the negative societal impact (social loss) from market failure will likely be much smaller for the private operation of the beach than for the streetlights. What is the most accurate economic reasoning to support this conclusion?
When a good becomes crowded or overused, its private provision is often associated with a smaller market failure and less social loss compared to the private provision of a good where one person's use does not diminish its availability to others. What is the primary economic reason for this difference?
Analyzing Market Failure: Congestible vs. Pure Public Goods