CHAPTER 10 Flashcards

1
Q

The four types of goods

A

Private goods, common goods, club goods, public goods

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2
Q

Common Resources

A

A good that is rival and also excludable

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3
Q

Marginal social cost

A

All marginal costs, NO MATTER who pays them

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4
Q

Marginal Private Benefit

A

The extra costs PAID BY THE SELLER from producing one extra unit

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5
Q

Externality

A

Side affect of an activity that affects bystanders whose interest are NOT taken into account

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6
Q

Negative Externalities

A

Side effect that HARMS BYSTANDERS: choices that impose cost on others

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7
Q

Positive Externalities

A

A side effect that BENEFITS bystanders: Choices that generate benefits for others

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8
Q

subsidy

A

A sum on money granted by the government to assist a business so price of a commodity may remain low or competitive

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9
Q

Quota

A

A limit on the max quantity of a good or service that can be sold

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10
Q

What is the difference between rival, nonrival, excludable, and non-excludable

A

Rival means when your use of something detracts from another’s ability to do so. EX- If I buy a cupcake, then there is one fewer available for you to buy and enjoy
Nonrival means when one person’s use does not subtract from another’s
EX- Just because I am watching something on my TV does not mean that you can’t watch the same show.
Excludable means when someone can be easily excluded from using something.
EX- I can exclude you from using my car by not giving you my key
Nonexcudable means when someone cannot be easily excluded from using something.
EX- you can not stop your neighbors from enjoying the fireworks you set off in your backyard.

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11
Q

What impact does the change in cap and trade permits have on equilibrium price and quantity?

A

it reduces it

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12
Q

What is the difference between a subsidy, quota, tax, and tradable permits?

A

a tax is designed to induce people to take account of the negative externality they cause
A subsidy is designed to induce people to take account the positive externalities they cause
A quota is a limit on the max quantity of a good or service that can be sold (corrects the overproduction issue)
A tradable permit is permits that can be traded with other companys to reduce the amount they use

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13
Q

How do you find social benefit from a graph?

A

Social benefit= private benefit + external benefit

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14
Q

What is the rational rule for society?

A

Produce more of an item as long as its marginal social benefit is at least as large as the marginal social cost.

Socially optimal quantity is located where marginal social benefit = marginal social cost

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15
Q

What is an example of tax emission?

A

Taxes on green house gases

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16
Q

What is the Coase Theorem? What are some applications of this theorem?

A

The Coase theorem is if bargaining is costless (easy to strike a deal) and property rights are clearly established and enforced, then externality problems can be solved by private bargains. Some applications for this theorem are:
-Private bargaining and corrective taxes or subsidies

17
Q

What are Marginal private benefit, marginal social benefit, marginal public benefit, and marginal external costs benefit?

A

Marginal private benefits are the extra enjoyment by the buyer from purchasing one extra unit (THIS IS THE BUYERS demand curve)
Marginal social benefits are all marginal benefits, NO MATTER who gets them

18
Q

To address a negative externality problem, a corrective tax should equal what?

A

It should be equal to the marginal external cost.

19
Q

How do you find the marginal external cost from a graph with marginal social cost and marginal private cost curves?

A

marginal private cost (supply) - marginal social cost

20
Q

How do you find the socially optimal price and quantity based on the graph of supply, demand, and marginal social benefit

A

socially optimal price is where overproduction starts and the rise is all the way to the marginal social cost
Demand IS the marginal social benefit
Quantity based is

21
Q

What is the free rider problem?

A

When someone can enjoy the benefits of a good WITHOUT BEARING THE COSTS

Free riders are bystanders enjoying positive externalities

22
Q

Given Marginal external cost and market price, how do you find the marginal social cost at the market equilibrium quantity?

A
23
Q

What are some examples of positive and negative externalities?

A

An example of a negative externality is your neighbor is playing loud music that is preventing you from sleeping.
A positive example is when you exercise your health insurance company ends up spending less medical care for you.

24
Q
A