Ineffectiveness of Markets for Conceiving and Raising Children
The process of conceiving and raising children serves as a clear example of an activity for which markets and firms are ill-suited. In most societies, this fundamental responsibility is handled through a combination of family structures and government support, such as public schooling, because these institutions are better equipped to manage the complex, long-term, and relational nature of child-rearing.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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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Match each economic activity with the type of institution that is generally most effective at organizing or providing it, considering the inherent nature of the task.
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A for-profit, publicly-traded corporation would be the most effective type of institution for organizing and providing universal, compulsory K-12 education for an entire nation.
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A new technology company launches an online platform to provide long-term elder care. Families post their needs, and freelance caregivers bid for the job. The platform awards the contract to the lowest bidder to maximize cost savings for the family. However, after a year, the service is plagued by reports of inconsistent care quality, high caregiver turnover, and low patient satisfaction. Which of the following best analyzes the fundamental reason for the market-based platform's struggles in this context?
Evaluating the Privatization of Emergency Services
Ineffectiveness of Markets for Conceiving and Raising Children
Learn After
Institutional Suitability for Child-Rearing
A tech company proposes a 'child-rearing-as-a-service' model, where they manage all aspects of raising a child from birth to 18 in a specialized facility for a fee, claiming greater efficiency than traditional family structures. From an economic perspective on institutional roles, what is the primary reason this market-based approach is fundamentally ill-suited for this activity?
Evaluating a Market-Based Child-Rearing Proposal
The primary economic argument against using market-based firms for child-rearing is that such firms would inevitably prioritize short-term profits over the complex, long-term, and relational investments essential for a child's development, aspects that are difficult to specify in a contract.
Match each activity with the primary institution (Market-based Firms, Families, or Government) best suited to organize it, based on the inherent characteristics of the activity.
In the field experiment involving Israeli daycare centers, the introduction of a monetary fine for parents who were late to pick up their children resulted in an increase in the number of late pickups. Which of the following provides the most accurate economic explanation for this counterintuitive result?
Institutional Advantages in Child-Rearing
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A government is debating two equally costly policies to enhance early childhood development. Policy A involves giving parents a substantial cash payment to purchase educational services and materials for their children on the open market. Policy B involves using the funds to establish and run a network of high-quality public preschools, free of charge to parents. Based on an economic analysis of institutional roles, why might Policy B be more effective in achieving the goal?
The provision of many goods and services is efficiently handled by for-profit firms. However, the comprehensive activity of raising a child is widely considered to be poorly suited for this model. Which of the following aspects of child-rearing is the least significant reason for this institutional mismatch?