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Incentives and Community Norms
Analyze the likely long-term impact on resident participation after the fine is removed and justify your reasoning based on how monetary penalties can interact with social obligations.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
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CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Incentives and Community Norms
A community library has a popular 'honor system' coffee station where patrons are expected to voluntarily contribute a small amount for each cup they take. To cover rising costs, the library replaces the donation jar with a mandatory, fixed-price payment system. After a year, they revert to the honor system, but find that average contributions per cup are now significantly lower than they were originally. Which of the following best analyzes this outcome?
Evaluating a Recycling Fine Policy
A non-profit organization relies on volunteers for a weekly community cleanup. To address inconsistent attendance, they introduce a small monetary penalty for registered volunteers who fail to show up. After six months, they remove the penalty. They observe that the no-show rate does not return to its original level but instead remains persistently higher than it was before the penalty was ever introduced. What is the most likely explanation for this outcome?
Explaining Persistent Behavioral Change
A city government, concerned about residents not sorting their recycling properly, replaces a community-led awareness campaign with a system of fines for improper sorting. According to the principle that monetary incentives can permanently alter social norms, if the city later removes the fines, the rate of proper recycling is expected to return to the levels seen during the initial awareness campaign.
Analyzing the Unintended Consequences of a Workplace Incentive Program
A university library, facing issues with students overstaying their time in reserved group study rooms, decides to implement a small monetary fine for every 15-minute overage. This replaces an informal honor system. After one semester, the library removes the fine system entirely. Based on the economic principle that certain incentives can permanently damage social norms, which of the following outcomes is the most likely long-term result?
A homeowners' association (HOA) observes that an informal community understanding of keeping lawns tidy is being replaced by a less cooperative norm after a temporary fine system was implemented and then removed. Arrange the following events to accurately describe the process by which the monetary penalty led to this lasting negative effect on the social norm.
A daycare center introduces a fine for parents who pick up their children late, hoping to reduce tardiness. However, after the fine is later removed, the rate of late pickups remains higher than it was before the fine was ever introduced. Match each element of this phenomenon to its correct description.