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Publicly Provided Security Services as a Merit Good
Personal security, such as protection from criminal acts or house fires, is typically treated as a merit good, ensured through publicly funded police and fire departments.
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Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Economics
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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Free Primary Education as a Merit Good
Publicly Provided Basic Healthcare as a Merit Good
Free Legal Representation as a Merit Good
Publicly Provided Security Services as a Merit Good
Merit Goods as a Societal Right
Significance of Future Implications in Defining Merit Goods
Dynamic and Contextual Nature of Merit Goods
A government is evaluating four publicly funded programs. Which of the following programs is best classified as a merit good, based on the specific principle that society deems it essential for an individual's long-term life prospects and opportunities, warranting its provision regardless of one's ability to pay?
Evaluating Universal Internet Access as a Merit Good
Analyzing Essential Services
Any good or service that is essential for an individual's basic survival, such as food or housing, is automatically classified as a merit good.
Match each good or service to the primary economic principle that explains its treatment in the economy.
Evaluating a Universal Childcare Policy
The defining characteristic that elevates a service like basic education to the status of a merit good, unlike a basic necessity like food, is the societal judgment that access to it constitutes a ________ ________ due to its profound impact on an individual's future life opportunities.
Arrange the following statements into the logical sequence that explains the process by which a service comes to be classified and treated as a merit good within a society.
Analyzing a Healthcare Policy Shift
A newly discovered, privately-produced medicine that cures a common and debilitating illness is immediately and automatically classified as a merit good simply because of its significant positive health benefits for individuals.
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Proposal for Privatized Community Security
Microfinance Risk Assessment
A wealthy, gated community proposes to its city council that it be allowed to opt out of paying taxes for the public police force. In return, the community will hire its own private security firm to patrol its streets. They argue this will improve their own safety and free up public police resources for other areas. From an economic perspective that prioritizes universal access to fundamental services, what is the strongest counter-argument to this proposal?
The Rationale for Publicly Funded Emergency Services
Consequences of a Subscription-Based Fire Service
Evaluating Evidence of Historical Economic Equality
A city government decides to fund its fire department entirely through voluntary donations from residents. This funding model is consistent with the principle of treating fire protection as a service that should be available to all, regardless of their ability to contribute.
A city council member, citing budget shortfalls, proposes replacing the tax-funded fire department with a subscription-based model. Under this plan, households pay an annual fee for fire protection. The fire department would still respond to fires at non-subscribers' homes, but would then bill the homeowner for the full, unsubsidized cost of the emergency response. The council member argues this is a fair, market-based solution. Which of the following statements presents the most significant economic critique of this proposal, based on the principle that essential safety services should be universally accessible?
A city manager argues that funding the police department based on the number of service calls from each neighborhood would be the most economically efficient allocation of resources, as it directs services to where they are most demanded. This statement accurately reflects the societal consensus on how essential security should be provided.
If a private company could provide fire protection services more efficiently and at a lower cost than the public fire department, economic principles dictate that the service should be privatized to maximize societal welfare.