Evaluating the Limits of Punishment Threats
A city council is designing a program to encourage residents to voluntarily maintain a local park. They propose a system where a committee can publicly name and fine residents who are observed not contributing. The council's official position is that simply having this rule in place will be enough to ensure cooperation, and they hope to never actually issue a fine. Critically evaluate this strategy. In your response, identify one major strength of relying solely on the threat of punishment and two potential weaknesses that might cause this strategy to fail in the long run.
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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.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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An experiment involves two groups playing a game for 10 rounds. In each round, individuals can contribute personal funds to a group project that benefits everyone. In Group A, participants are told they have the option to pay a small cost to reduce the earnings of others. In Group B, no such option exists. The results show that contributions in Group B start high but decrease steadily. In Group A, contributions start high and remain high for all 10 rounds, yet the option to reduce another's earnings is almost never used after the first round. Which statement best explains the difference in outcomes?
Evaluating a Community Contribution Policy
The Power of Potential Penalties
Historically, many of the world's major cities grew around marketplaces. Which of the following best analyzes the primary economic function these marketplaces served that spurred this urban growth?
In a repeated public goods game where participants can contribute to a collective project, the only way to ensure high levels of contribution are maintained over time is by having participants consistently and frequently use an available punishment option against low contributors in every round.
Evaluating the Limits of Punishment Threats
Analyze the following scenarios from a repeated public goods game and match each one to the economic principle it best illustrates.
Interpreting Experimental Economic Data
In a multi-round public goods experiment, a punishment option is made available to all participants, allowing them to reduce a low-contributor's earnings at a personal cost. Observers note that contributions to the public good remain high across all rounds, yet the punishment option is almost never actually used by the participants. Which statement best analyzes the strategic reasoning that leads to this outcome?
Community Garden Contribution Strategy