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The 'polluter pays' approach to environmental policy mandates that national authorities must always implement the most stringent financial penalties on polluting entities to internalize environmental costs, without regard for other economic or social consequences.
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A city's air quality is declining due to emissions from several industrial factories. The city council is considering different policies to address this. Which of the following proposals best embodies the economic principle that the entity responsible for creating pollution should also be responsible for its costs?
The 'polluter pays' approach to environmental policy mandates that national authorities must always implement the most stringent financial penalties on polluting entities to internalize environmental costs, without regard for other economic or social consequences.
Arrange the following events and economic decisions in the logical order that explains how Britain came to specialize in textile production during the industrial era.
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Match each environmental policy instrument to the specific way it implements the principle that those responsible for pollution should bear its costs.
By requiring a factory to pay for the environmental damage it causes, a government policy forces the factory to ________ the costs of pollution, which were previously borne by society.
A country implements a stringent tax on its domestic manufacturing sector to cover the environmental costs of industrial pollution. This significantly raises the production costs for goods within that country. Which of the following scenarios best illustrates a potential conflict with a key international guideline associated with the principle that polluters should bear the costs of their actions?