Property Rights and Negotiated Outcomes
A chemical plant's operations result in an annual profit loss of $150,000 for a downstream fishery. The plant can eliminate the harmful discharge by installing a filtration system at an annual cost of $100,000. Assume the plant and the fishery can negotiate with each other without any costs or impediments.
Analyze two separate scenarios:
- The plant has the legal right to discharge waste into the river.
- The fishery has the legal right to a clean river.
In your analysis, explain for each scenario whether the filtration system will be installed and describe the financial transaction (i.e., who pays whom and a possible range for the payment) that would lead to this outcome. Conclude by comparing how the initial assignment of legal rights affects the final outcome (economic efficiency) versus the distribution of wealth between the two parties.
0
1
Tags
Library Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
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
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Initial Conditions of the Fishermen-Plantation Bargaining Example
Requirement for Representation in Multi-Party Bargaining
A riverside factory's operations pollute a river, causing $200,000 in annual losses for a downstream fishing cooperative. The factory could install a new filtration system for an annual cost of $150,000, which would completely eliminate the pollution. According to the principles of private negotiation to resolve such issues, a mutually beneficial agreement is theoretically possible. However, in this case, no deal is reached. Which of the following provides the most likely analytical explanation for this failure?
Negotiating an Externality
Property Rights and Negotiated Outcomes
In a scenario involving a polluting plantation and an affected fishery where private negotiation is possible and costless, the Coase theorem implies that assigning the legal right to clean water to the fishermen will necessarily lead to a lower final level of pollution than if the right to pollute were assigned to the plantation.
Calculating the Bargaining Range for an Externality
In the classic economic scenario of a polluting banana plantation and a downstream fishery, match each element of the private negotiation process with its corresponding description.
Bargaining Over an Externality
A single chemical plant discharges effluent into a river, which harms the livelihoods of 5,000 independent fishermen who operate along the river. The total annual economic loss to all fishermen is estimated at $1 million. The plant could install a filtration system for a one-time cost of $500,000 that would eliminate the pollution entirely. Assume property rights are clearly defined and enforceable. Despite the potential for a mutually beneficial agreement, why is a private bargain between the plant and the fishermen highly unlikely to succeed in this situation?
A riverside chemical plant's discharge reduces the profits of a downstream fishery. The law grants the plant the right to discharge the chemicals. The fishery's total profit loss is $100,000 per year, while the plant could install a filtration system for $70,000 per year that would eliminate the discharge. Arrange the following steps into the most logical order for a private negotiation to resolve this externality.
Evaluating Bargaining Outcomes Under Different Legal Frameworks