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Limitations of Coasean Bargaining: Complexity and Number of Parties
Coasean bargaining is often unable to resolve complex market failures, particularly those that involve a large number of parties. While private negotiation can be effective when few individuals are affected, its practicality diminishes significantly as the number of players increases, making it an unlikely solution for widespread issues.
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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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Case Study: DuPont's PFOA Pollution and Coasean Bargaining Failure
Transaction Costs in Coasean Bargaining
Addressing Market Failures via Institutional Reform and Government Intervention
A new airport is built near a large, pre-existing suburban community of 10,000 households. The noise from planes taking off and landing has significantly reduced the quality of life for the residents. The airport authority and a residents' association attempt to negotiate a solution. The residents' association finds it nearly impossible to get all 10,000 households to agree on a unified demand or to contribute to the legal and administrative fees required for the negotiation. Based on this situation, which of the following best identifies the primary practical obstacle to reaching an efficient private agreement?
Analyzing Barriers to Private Environmental Negotiation
Identifying Barriers to Private Negotiation
Match each scenario with the primary obstacle to a successful private negotiation that it illustrates.
If property rights are clearly defined and legally enforceable for an externality-producing activity, private bargaining between the affected parties is guaranteed to result in an efficient outcome.
Evaluating Critical Barriers to Private Negotiation
Analyzing Bargaining Failures in the Digital Age
A small, independent coffee shop discovers that a large corporation plans to build a factory upstream on the river that supplies the town's water. The coffee shop owner obtains internal corporate documents, not yet public, indicating the factory will discharge a chemical that, while not yet regulated, is known to impart a bitter taste to water. The corporation is unaware that the coffee shop owner has this information. The town has no specific laws regarding this particular chemical discharge. In this situation, which combination of factors presents the most significant obstacles to reaching an efficient private agreement between the coffee shop and the corporation?
Evaluating the Viability of a Private Bargaining Solution
Evaluating a Bargaining Impasse
Limitations of Coasean Bargaining: Complexity and Number of Parties
Alternative Economic Instruments for Pollution Control When Coasean Bargaining Fails
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Feasibility of Private Negotiations
Effectiveness of Private Negotiation in Resolving Disputes
Consider two scenarios involving a dispute. In Scenario A, a farmer's pesticide runoff pollutes a single neighboring farmer's stream. In Scenario B, a large factory's air emissions affect the health and property of thousands of residents in a nearby city.
Assuming that legal rights (e.g., who has the right to clean air or water) are clearly established in both situations, which statement best explains the likely difference in resolving these disputes through private negotiation alone?
According to the principles of private bargaining for resolving externalities, establishing clear property rights is a sufficient condition to guarantee an efficient negotiated outcome, regardless of how many individuals are involved.
The Challenge of Scale in Private Negotiations
River Pollution and Negotiation Feasibility
Analyze the following scenarios involving disputes or shared resources. Match each scenario with the most accurate description of the feasibility of resolving it through private negotiation, based on the number of parties involved.
When a negative issue, such as pollution from a factory, affects a large number of people, private negotiation becomes an impractical solution primarily because the associated __________ costs of coordinating and reaching an agreement among all parties become prohibitively high.
Evaluating a Proposed Solution for Airport Noise
Evaluating Policy Responses to Urban Congestion