Learn Before
Market Competition and Efficiency
Consider the market for a new video game, which is a product where one person's use prevents another's use, and for which sellers can prevent non-payers from obtaining it. In Town A, the game is sold by many competing retailers. In Town B, a single store has the exclusive right to sell the game. Compare the likely efficiency of the market outcomes in these two towns and explain the key reason for any difference.
0
1
Tags
CORE Econ
Economics
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economy
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
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Internet Service Market Efficiency
A small, isolated town has only one company providing prescription eyeglasses. This product is excludable (only paying customers get them) and rival (one person's pair cannot be used by another simultaneously). Given this market structure, which statement best analyzes the likely economic outcome?
The allocation of any good that is both rivalrous in consumption and excludable will always be Pareto efficient as long as it is distributed through a market mechanism.
Market Competition and Efficiency
Market Competition and Efficiency
Efficiency of Market Allocation
Analyze each market scenario for a private good and match it with its most likely efficiency outcome based on the level of competition described.
When a good is both rivalrous and excludable, its allocation through a market mechanism is unlikely to be Pareto efficient if the market lacks ____.
Consider the market for a standard, widely available textbook, which is a good that is both rivalrous and excludable. Arrange the following market scenarios in order from the one most likely to result in a Pareto-efficient allocation to the one least likely to result in a Pareto-efficient allocation.
A small town grants a single company the exclusive right to provide residential garbage collection, a service for which residents must pay directly. The service is considered both rivalrous (the company's truck can't be in two places at once) and excludable (service is denied for non-payment). Many residents complain that the prices are excessively high and the service quality is poor. Based on economic principles regarding market outcomes, which of the following proposals is most likely to lead to a more efficient allocation of this service?
The allocation of any good that is both rivalrous in consumption and excludable will always be Pareto efficient as long as it is distributed through a market mechanism.