In a market where a single firm has significant power to set prices, match each economic concept to its correct description in this market context.
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In a market where a single firm has significant power to set prices, match each economic concept to its correct description in this market context.
A chemical factory has the established legal right to discharge waste into a river, which negatively affects a downstream community that relies on fishing. The government intervenes by imposing a tax on the factory for each unit of waste discharged. This tax successfully reduces pollution to a level where the marginal social cost equals the marginal social benefit. Which of the following statements accurately describes this situation in economic terms?
Consider a situation where a factory has the legal right to pollute a river. If the government intervenes with a new regulation that forces the factory to reduce its pollution to a socially optimal level, the resulting economic outcome is both Pareto efficient and a Pareto improvement over the initial situation.
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A factory has the legal right to pollute a river, creating a negative externality for a downstream community. A government agency intervenes to address this market failure. Arrange the following events and economic descriptions into the correct logical sequence.
Reconciling Economic Efficiency and Fairness in Policy
When a government policy forces a polluter, who initially held the legal right to pollute, to reduce emissions to a socially optimal level, the resulting outcome is considered Pareto efficient. However, because the polluter is made worse off compared to their initial situation, this change is not considered a Pareto __________.
A large-scale agricultural operation has the legal right to use a pesticide that runs off into a nearby lake, harming the local fishing industry. The government intervenes by banning the pesticide. Match each description of the situation with the most accurate economic concept.
Consider a situation where a factory has the legal right to pollute a river. If the government intervenes with a new regulation that forces the factory to reduce its pollution to a socially optimal level, the resulting economic outcome is both Pareto efficient and a Pareto improvement over the initial situation.