In a shared household where maintaining a clean kitchen represents a social dilemma, an individual roommate's decision to not clean, while hoping someone else will, is considered an irrational choice because it ultimately leads to a less desirable outcome for the entire group.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Kitchen Cleanliness Dilemma
Four roommates are consistently frustrated by their messy shared kitchen. While all of them would prefer a clean kitchen, the effort of cleaning is a personal cost that leads to no one wanting to do it, resulting in a perpetually untidy space. Which of the following proposed solutions most effectively addresses the underlying conflict between individual cost and collective benefit in this situation?
Evaluating Solutions to the Shared Chore Problem
The Rational Choice of a Messy Kitchen
A shared household where roommates must decide who cleans the common kitchen is a classic social dilemma. Match each component of this dilemma with its corresponding description in the context of the kitchen scenario.
In a shared household where maintaining a clean kitchen represents a social dilemma, an individual roommate's decision to not clean, while hoping someone else will, is considered an irrational choice because it ultimately leads to a less desirable outcome for the entire group.
Failure of a Cooperative Solution
In the social dilemma of a shared household, the desirable outcome of a clean common area is often not achieved because the ____ of cleaning is concentrated on the individual who performs the task, while the benefits are diffused among all residents.
A group of roommates faces the recurring problem of a messy shared kitchen. Although everyone prefers a clean space, the kitchen often remains untidy because no one wants to do the cleaning. Arrange the following statements to correctly model the logical progression that leads to this undesirable group outcome.
Four roommates share a kitchen. Each roommate individually prefers a clean kitchen to a dirty one, but also prefers that someone else does the cleaning. As a result, the kitchen is almost always dirty. What does this situation most clearly illustrate about the relationship between individual incentives and group outcomes?