Learn Before
Surplus Distribution when Plantations Receive the Minimum Acceptable Offer
If the fishermen's payment to the plantations equals the minimum acceptable offer—just covering the plantations' lost profits—then the entire net social gain from reducing pollution is captured by the fishing industry. In this specific outcome, the plantations' financial standing remains unchanged, meaning they are no better or worse off than before the agreement.
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
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Surplus Distribution when Plantations Receive the Minimum Acceptable Offer
A steel mill's production process pollutes a nearby river, negatively affecting a commercial fishery downstream. The graph below illustrates the marginal costs associated with the mill's production and the constant market price for steel. The mill, acting in its own self-interest, produces at quantity Q_Market, where the market price equals its private cost. The socially optimal level of production, which accounts for the pollution damage, is Q_Optimal. If the fishery owners were to negotiate with the steel mill to convince them to reduce production from Q_Market to Q_Optimal, which labeled area represents the absolute minimum payment the mill would have to receive to agree to this reduction?
[A graph is shown with Quantity on the x-axis and Price/Cost on the y-axis. There is a horizontal line for 'Price'. There are two upward-sloping curves: 'Marginal Private Cost (MPC)' and 'Marginal Social Cost (MSC)', with MSC positioned above MPC. The intersection of Price and MPC defines the quantity Q_Market. The intersection of Price and MSC defines the quantity Q_Optimal.
- Area 'X' is the triangle-like region bounded by the Price line, the MPC curve, and the vertical lines at Q_Optimal and Q_Market.
- Area 'Y' is the triangle-like region bounded by the MSC curve, the MPC curve, and the vertical line at Q_Market.
- Area 'Z' is the trapezoidal region under the MSC curve between Q_Optimal and Q_Market.
- Area 'W' is the trapezoidal region under the MPC curve between Q_Optimal and Q_Market.]
Calculating Minimum Compensation for an Externality
Negotiating an Environmental Agreement
In a private negotiation to reduce a negative externality, the minimum compensation a polluting firm would accept to decrease its production to the socially efficient level is equal to the entire net social gain created by the output reduction.
Explaining the Minimum Acceptable Offer
A paper mill's production process pollutes a river, causing $60,000 in annual damages to a downstream vineyard. The mill currently earns a profit of $100,000 per year. If the mill were to install new filtration technology that reduces its output to a socially optimal level, its annual profit would fall to $75,000, and the damage to the vineyard would decrease to $20,000. Assuming the vineyard owner and the mill owner decide to negotiate a private agreement, what is the absolute minimum annual payment the mill would accept to reduce its output?
Evaluating a Negotiation Proposal
A factory's production creates pollution that harms a local farm. If the farmer offers to pay the factory to reduce its output to a more socially desirable level, the absolute minimum payment the factory would accept must be an amount that exactly covers its ________ from reducing production.
A chemical factory's production pollutes a lake, reducing the profits of a nearby commercial fishery. By negotiating, they can move from the current inefficient output level to a socially optimal one. This change results in specific financial outcomes for each party. Match the financial outcome to its corresponding economic concept within the negotiation.
A chemical plant's operations result in airborne pollutants that damage the crops of an adjacent commercial farm. The plant and the farm enter into a private negotiation. The farm agrees to pay the chemical plant the absolute minimum amount necessary to persuade the plant to reduce its production to the socially efficient quantity. If this agreement is successfully implemented, what will be the direct impact on the chemical plant's total profit compared to its profit level before the agreement?
Learn After
A paper mill's operations cause pollution that reduces the annual profit of a nearby vineyard by $80,000. The mill can adopt a cleaner production method that would eliminate the pollution, but this would cost the mill $35,000 in annual profit. The vineyard owner offers to pay the mill exactly $35,000 per year to switch to the cleaner method, and the mill agrees. Based on this agreement, what is the financial outcome for each party?
Analyzing Surplus Distribution in an Externality Negotiation
Consider a scenario where a chemical plant's discharge negatively affects a downstream fishery. The two parties negotiate a solution where the fishery pays the chemical plant a sum of money to reduce its discharge. If the payment amount is precisely equal to the chemical plant's lost profit from reducing the discharge, then the net social gain from the agreement is shared equally between the two parties.
Explaining Surplus Distribution in an Externality Agreement
Evaluating Fairness in Externality Negotiations
A leather tannery's operations release chemicals into a river, causing $200,000 in annual damages to a downstream fishing business. The tannery could install a filtration system to eliminate the pollution, which would reduce its own annual profit by $120,000. The fishing business offers to pay the tannery to install the system. Match each potential annual payment amount from the fishing business to the resulting distribution of the net social gain.
A factory's operations cause $150,000 in annual damages to a nearby agricultural farm. The factory can implement a new process to eliminate the pollution, but this would reduce its own annual profit by $60,000. The farm and factory negotiate an agreement where the farm pays the factory exactly $60,000 to implement the new process. In this situation, the farm captures a net gain of $____ from the agreement.
A fishing community is negatively affected by pesticide runoff from upstream banana plantations. The two parties decide to negotiate a private agreement to reduce the pollution to a socially optimal level. Arrange the following events in the logical order that would result in the entire net social gain from the agreement being captured by the fishing community.
A large-scale farm's pesticide use harms a nearby beekeeping operation, causing $100,000 in lost honey profits annually. The farm can switch to a different, bee-safe pesticide, but this would reduce the farm's own annual profit by $40,000. The two parties negotiate an agreement for the farm to switch pesticides. After the agreement is implemented, an economic analysis shows that the beekeeping operation's overall profit increased by $60,000 per year, while the farm's profit level is identical to what it was before the agreement. Based on this outcome, what must have been the annual payment from the beekeepers to the farm?
Analyzing the Distribution of Gains from an Externality Agreement