Incentivizing Pollution Reduction
A factory's air pollution is causing respiratory illnesses in a nearby town. In response, the government enacts a policy that legally requires the factory to pay the medical bills for any resident whose illness is linked to the pollution. From an economic perspective, explain the two primary ways this policy is likely to influence the factory's production decisions.
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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
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A large-scale farm's pesticide runoff contaminates a nearby river, harming a commercial fishery. In response, a new policy is enacted that requires the farm to financially compensate the fishery for any documented losses in its fish harvest. How does this policy of required compensation create an incentive for the farm to change its behavior?
Firm Efficiency vs. Market Transactions
Analyzing a Pollution Compensation Policy
Incentivizing Pollution Reduction
Incentivizing Pollution Reduction
A policy is implemented that requires industrial plants to pay for any environmental damage their water discharge causes to a local fishing industry. A valid conclusion is that this policy will only succeed in reducing pollution if the required payments are so high that they force the industrial plants to cease operations.
Analyzing a Pollution Compensation Policy
A large farm's use of a specific pesticide results in runoff that causes an estimated $50,000 of annual damage to a nearby commercial fishing operation. A new government policy is enacted that legally requires the farm to pay the full $50,000 in damages to the fishing operation each year. The farm investigates two possible alternatives to paying the compensation: 1) switching to a different, non-damaging pesticide, which would increase its own operational costs by $40,000 annually, or 2) investing in a new irrigation system that eliminates runoff, which would increase its own operational costs by $65,000 annually. Assuming the farm's goal is to maximize its profit, which of the following actions will it most likely take in response to the new policy?
A chemical factory's production process pollutes a river, which harms the business of a downstream fishery. A new regulation requires the factory to pay the fishery an amount equal to the fishery's lost profits. Match each economic term to its correct description within this scenario.
A government introduces a policy requiring factories that pollute a river to pay for the financial losses incurred by downstream fishing businesses. Arrange the following events into the logical sequence that describes how this policy incentivizes the factories to reduce pollution.