Match each economic scenario with its resulting market outcome relative to the social optimum.
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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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Analyzing Market Outcomes
Which statement best contrasts the free market equilibrium quantity with the socially optimal quantity for goods that have positive externalities versus those that have negative externalities?
True or False: In the presence of a positive externality, the free market produces more than the socially optimal quantity, while in the presence of a negative externality, the free market produces less than the socially optimal quantity.
Match each economic scenario with its resulting market outcome relative to the social optimum.
Explaining Divergent Market Outcomes from Third-Party Effects
Comparing Market Inefficiencies from Third-Party Effects
Which statement best analyzes the parallel but opposite market failures that result from activities with significant third-party effects?
Complete the following statement that compares market outcomes when third-party effects are present: Activities that impose unpriced costs on others lead to ____-production because private decision-makers ignore the external ____; conversely, activities that create uncompensated benefits for others lead to ____-production because private decision-makers do not capture the external ____.
A policymaker argues: 'Since both positive and negative externalities represent market failures where the private market outcome diverges from the social optimum, a single, consistent policy approach is best. Therefore, we should implement a tax on all activities that generate significant external effects to correct the market quantity.' Evaluate this policymaker's reasoning.
An economics student makes the following argument: 'Market failures from third-party effects are fundamentally the same. Whether an activity produces a harmful pollutant or a beautiful public garden, the core problem is that the market price doesn't reflect the true value. In both cases, the private market produces a quantity different from what society wants. Therefore, the analysis is identical.' Which of the following statements provides the most accurate critique of this reasoning?
Match each economic scenario with its resulting market outcome relative to the social optimum.