Public Finance Harvey Rosen 10e - Test Bank

Public Finance Harvey Rosen 10e - Test Bank   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   Chapter 05 Externalities   Multiple Choice Questions 1. Marginal damages are hard to measure because A. they can be generated from multiple sources.   B. they are hard to graph. …

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Public Finance Harvey Rosen 10e – Test Bank

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

Chapter 05

Externalities

 

Multiple Choice Questions

1. Marginal damages are hard to measure because

A. they can be generated from multiple sources.

 

B. they are hard to graph.

 

C. they happen over time.

 

D. no one cares about them.

 

2. In the figure below, if the marginal damages line did not originate at 0,

A. it would mean that marginal damages did not exist.

 

B. there is no way to find MSC.

 

C. MSC would not originate at the same intercept as MPC.

 

D. all of these answer options are correct.

 

3. Externalities can be positive because

A. marginal damages do not last over time.

 

B. utility can be impacted positively as well as negatively.

 

C. there is no concept for marginal benefit.

 

D. positive externalities are subsidies.

 

4. Refer to the following graphs. Which graph(s) represent(s) an externality?

A. graph A

 

B. graphs A and B

 

C. graph B

 

D. neither graph A nor graph B

 

5. Refer to the figure below. What is the total amount of tax paid by Bart?

A. 0

 

B. 50

 

C. 15

 

D. 750

 

6. Congestion pricing

A. is a tax.

 

B. keeps nasal passages clear.

 

C. is never efficient.

 

D. all of these answer options are correct.

 

7. Pollution rights may be traded if

A. polluters try to hide pollution.

 

B. administrators are uncertain about Pigouvian taxes.

 

C. there is no market for pollution.

 

D. pollution is harmless.

 

8. Externalities can be produced by ____________, as well as ____________.

A. individuals; firms

 

B. market prices; market incomes

 

C. oceans; streams

 

D. none of these answer options are correct.

 

9. A Pigouvian tax corrects for

A. market congestion.

 

B. market losses.

 

C. inefficient sales.

 

D. low market prices.

 

10. Which of the following is correct?

A. SMC = PMC – MD

 

B. MPB = MSB + MEB

 

C. SMC = PMC + MD

 

D. MSC = MPB

 

E. MSB = MSC + MPB

 

11. Marginal benefits are downward sloping when

A. there are no total benefits.

 

B. the slope of the marginal benefits curve is negative.

 

C. total benefits are increasing at a decreasing rate.

 

D. marginal costs are upward sloping.

 

12. A Pigouvian subsidy

A. cannot exist with externalities.

 

B. is the same thing as a Pigouvian tax.

 

C. is measured in terms of Pigouvian dollars.

 

D. moves production to the socially optimal level of output.

 

13. As a general rule, zero pollution is not socially desirable because

A. there would be no production.

 

B. the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) needs to have something to do.

 

C. no pollution would lead to global warming.

 

D. all of these answer options are correct.

 

14. Externalities require government intervention when

A. violence will result between disputing parties.

 

B. there are only a few sellers in the market.

 

C. property rights are not clearly established.

 

D. the government imposes sales taxes.

 

E. all of these answer options are correct.

 

15. Marginal damages

A. must always be considered in social marginal costs.

 

B. must not be considered in social marginal costs.

 

C. must sometimes be considered in social marginal costs.

 

D. have nothing to do with social marginal costs.

 

16. A tax levied on each unit of pollution is

A. an income tax.

 

B. a emissions fee.

 

C. a flat tax.

 

D. an international tax.

 

17. A cap-and-trade policy

A. has a set number of permits.

 

B. allows polluters to trade permits.

 

C. caps the total level of pollution allowed.

 

D. all of these answer options are correct.

 

18. Command-and-control regulations

A. are less flexible than incentive based regulations.

 

B. come from the private sector.

 

C. have technology standards a type of control.

 

D. are less flexible than incentive based regulations and have technology standards a type of control.

 

E. are less flexible than incentive based regulations and come from the private sector.

 

19. Technology standards work in reducing externalities of all kinds.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

20. Negative externalities cause loss of welfare not transmitted by market factors.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

21. Externalities can be positive, as well as negative.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

22. Pure public goods involve positive externalities.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

23. A subsidy for pollution not produced can induce producers to pollute at the efficient level.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

24. Pollution rights can be traded and are always efficient.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

25. In the 1970s, the U.S. relied on Command-and-Control models of pollution regulation.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

26. The desire in the U.S. for owner-occupied housing led to subsidies that contributed to the recession which started in 2007.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

27. Market-oriented solutions to externalities rarely work.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

28. For market efficiency, MSC must be equated to MSB.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

29. College education is an example of a positive externality.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

30. An emissions fee is preferable to a cap-and-trade when MSB are elastic and costs are uncertain.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

31. Incentive-based regulations provide polluters no incentive to reduce pollution and are thus not used often.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

 

Essay Questions

32. Suppose the factory Afro-Puffs Inc. produces wigs. As a by-product of this wig production, they also produce dangerous emissions of toxic gases (as a result of the strong glue used to hold the hair in place). The De-Lite car factory, down the road, experiences a negative externality from this production process. Suppose that the supply curve (private marginal costs) for the wig factory is X = (2/5)P – 2, and it faces a market demand of Xd = 15 – P/2. The marginal damages caused by the production of wigs can be written as X = P – 1/2.

(a) Find the equilibrium price and quantity in the market for wigs.
(b) Find the socially optimal level of wigs and the corresponding price.
(c) How much should the wig factory be taxed per wig?

 

 

 

 

33. A steel factory has the right to discharge waste into a river. The waste reduces the number of fish, causing damage for fisheries. Let X denotes the quantity of waste dumped. The marginal damage, denoted MD, is given by the equation MD = 2 + 5Q. The marginal benefit (MB) of dumping waste is given by the equation MB = 34 – 3Q.

(a) Calculate the efficient quantity of waste.
(b) What is the efficient fee, in dollars per unit of waste, which would cause the firm to dump only an efficient quantity of waste?
(c) What would be the quantity dumped if the firm did not care about the fishery?

 

 

 

 

34. The private marginal benefit for commodity X is given by 15 – X, where X is the number of units consumed. The private marginal cost of producing X is constant at 10. In the absence of any government intervention, how much X is produced? What is the gain to society involved in moving from the inefficient to the efficient level of production?

 

 

 

 

35. Consider the case of two farmers, Tony and Hakim, depicted in the following figure. Both use DDT (a chemical pesticide) for their crops. The use of DDT causes an externality for swimmers down river from the farms.

(a) Show the amount of pesticides used if each uses the privately optimal level of pesticides.
(b) Show the amount of pesticides used if they are socially concerned.
(c) Why is a reduction back to XH = HT not socially desired?

 

 

 

 

36. Refer to the figures below to answer this question:

Cap-and-trade versus emissions fee when marginal social benefits are inelastic and costs are uncertain:

Cap-and-trade versus emissions fee when marginal social benefits are elastic and costs are uncertain:

a) In case of an inelastic marginal social benefit curve, what type of pollution reduction system should the government employ? Why?
b) If the social benefit curve is elastic, do you answer change?
c) What are advantages and disadvantages of Cap-and-Trade systems over Emission Fee systems when the inflation and change in marginal costs are considered?

 

 

 

 

37. Why are command- and -control regulations less flexible than incentive based systems?

 

 

 

 

38. Which policy is more effective when handling externalities: Cap-and-trade or emissions fee?

 

 

 

 

39. List and discuss three problems that might arise when using the Coase theorem.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 05 Externalities Answer Key

Multiple Choice Questions

1. Marginal damages are hard to measure because

A. they can be generated from multiple sources.

 

B. they are hard to graph.

 

C. they happen over time.

 

D. no one cares about them.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Graphical Analysis
 

 

2. In the figure below, if the marginal damages line did not originate at 0,

A. it would mean that marginal damages did not exist.

 

B. there is no way to find MSC.

 

C. MSC would not originate at the same intercept as MPC.

 

D. all of these answer options are correct.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Taxes and Subsidies
 

 

3. Externalities can be positive because

A. marginal damages do not last over time.

 

B. utility can be impacted positively as well as negatively.

 

C. there is no concept for marginal benefit.

 

D. positive externalities are subsidies.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: The Nature of Externalities
 

 

4. Refer to the following graphs. Which graph(s) represent(s) an externality?

A. graph A

 

B. graphs A and B

 

C. graph B

 

D. neither graph A nor graph B

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Graphical Analysis
 

 

5. Refer to the figure below. What is the total amount of tax paid by Bart?

A. 0

 

B. 50

 

C. 15

 

D. 750

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

6. Congestion pricing

A. is a tax.

 

B. keeps nasal passages clear.

 

C. is never efficient.

 

D. all of these answer options are correct.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

7. Pollution rights may be traded if

A. polluters try to hide pollution.

 

B. administrators are uncertain about Pigouvian taxes.

 

C. there is no market for pollution.

 

D. pollution is harmless.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

8. Externalities can be produced by ____________, as well as ____________.

A. individuals; firms

 

B. market prices; market incomes

 

C. oceans; streams

 

D. none of these answer options are correct.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: The Nature of Externalities
 

 

9. A Pigouvian tax corrects for

A. market congestion.

 

B. market losses.

 

C. inefficient sales.

 

D. low market prices.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Taxes and Subsidies
 

 

10. Which of the following is correct?

A. SMC = PMC – MD

 

B. MPB = MSB + MEB

 

C. SMC = PMC + MD

 

D. MSC = MPB

 

E. MSB = MSC + MPB

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Graphical Analysis
 

 

11. Marginal benefits are downward sloping when

A. there are no total benefits.

 

B. the slope of the marginal benefits curve is negative.

 

C. total benefits are increasing at a decreasing rate.

 

D. marginal costs are upward sloping.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

12. A Pigouvian subsidy

A. cannot exist with externalities.

 

B. is the same thing as a Pigouvian tax.

 

C. is measured in terms of Pigouvian dollars.

 

D. moves production to the socially optimal level of output.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Taxes and Subsidies
 

 

13. As a general rule, zero pollution is not socially desirable because

A. there would be no production.

 

B. the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) needs to have something to do.

 

C. no pollution would lead to global warming.

 

D. all of these answer options are correct.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Graphical Analysis
 

 

14. Externalities require government intervention when

A. violence will result between disputing parties.

 

B. there are only a few sellers in the market.

 

C. property rights are not clearly established.

 

D. the government imposes sales taxes.

 

E. all of these answer options are correct.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Private Responses
 

 

15. Marginal damages

A. must always be considered in social marginal costs.

 

B. must not be considered in social marginal costs.

 

C. must sometimes be considered in social marginal costs.

 

D. have nothing to do with social marginal costs.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Graphical Analysis
 

 

16. A tax levied on each unit of pollution is

A. an income tax.

 

B. a emissions fee.

 

C. a flat tax.

 

D. an international tax.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

17. A cap-and-trade policy

A. has a set number of permits.

 

B. allows polluters to trade permits.

 

C. caps the total level of pollution allowed.

 

D. all of these answer options are correct.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

18. Command-and-control regulations

A. are less flexible than incentive based regulations.

 

B. come from the private sector.

 

C. have technology standards a type of control.

 

D. are less flexible than incentive based regulations and have technology standards a type of control.

 

E. are less flexible than incentive based regulations and come from the private sector.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

19. Technology standards work in reducing externalities of all kinds.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

20. Negative externalities cause loss of welfare not transmitted by market factors.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Introduction
 

 

21. Externalities can be positive, as well as negative.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: The Nature of Externalities
 

 

22. Pure public goods involve positive externalities.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: The Nature of Externalities
 

 

23. A subsidy for pollution not produced can induce producers to pollute at the efficient level.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Taxes and Subsidies
 

 

24. Pollution rights can be traded and are always efficient.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

25. In the 1970s, the U.S. relied on Command-and-Control models of pollution regulation.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: The U.S. Response
 

 

26. The desire in the U.S. for owner-occupied housing led to subsidies that contributed to the recession which started in 2007.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Positive Externalities
 

 

27. Market-oriented solutions to externalities rarely work.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: The U.S. Response
 

 

28. For market efficiency, MSC must be equated to MSB.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Positive Externalities
 

 

29. College education is an example of a positive externality.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: The Nature of Externalities
 

 

30. An emissions fee is preferable to a cap-and-trade when MSB are elastic and costs are uncertain.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

31. Incentive-based regulations provide polluters no incentive to reduce pollution and are thus not used often.

A. True

 

B. False

 

C. Uncertain

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: 1 Easy
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

Essay Questions

32. Suppose the factory Afro-Puffs Inc. produces wigs. As a by-product of this wig production, they also produce dangerous emissions of toxic gases (as a result of the strong glue used to hold the hair in place). The De-Lite car factory, down the road, experiences a negative externality from this production process. Suppose that the supply curve (private marginal costs) for the wig factory is X = (2/5)P – 2, and it faces a market demand of Xd = 15 – P/2. The marginal damages caused by the production of wigs can be written as X = P – 1/2.

(a) Find the equilibrium price and quantity in the market for wigs.
(b) Find the socially optimal level of wigs and the corresponding price.
(c) How much should the wig factory be taxed per wig?

(a) Set PMC equal to demand and solve for P and X. X = 50/9, P = 170/9.
(b) Find SMC by adding PMC to MD. Set SMC equal to demand and solve for P and X. X = 49/11, P = 232/11.
(c) At X = 49/11, subtract PMC from SMC. Tax = 109/22.

 

AACSB: Analytic
Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: 3 Hard
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Taxes and Subsidies
 

 

33. A steel factory has the right to discharge waste into a river. The waste reduces the number of fish, causing damage for fisheries. Let X denotes the quantity of waste dumped. The marginal damage, denoted MD, is given by the equation MD = 2 + 5Q. The marginal benefit (MB) of dumping waste is given by the equation MB = 34 – 3Q.

(a) Calculate the efficient quantity of waste.
(b) What is the efficient fee, in dollars per unit of waste, which would cause the firm to dump only an efficient quantity of waste?
(c) What would be the quantity dumped if the firm did not care about the fishery?

(a) Set MD = MB and solve for Q*. Q* = 4.
(b) Insert 4 units into either MD or MB. Fee = 22.
(c) If the firm did not care about the fisheries, then they will discharge was as long as its marginal benefit is greater than 0. Therefore, set MB equal to zero and solve for X. X = 34/3.

 

AACSB: Analytic
Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: 3 Hard
Topic: Graphical Analysis
 

 

34. The private marginal benefit for commodity X is given by 15 – X, where X is the number of units consumed. The private marginal cost of producing X is constant at 10. In the absence of any government intervention, how much X is produced? What is the gain to society involved in moving from the inefficient to the efficient level of production?

Without intervention, optimal will be where PMB = 0. X = 15. The efficient level is X = 5. The area beneath the PMB is gained. Gain = 25.

 

AACSB: Analytic
Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: 3 Hard
Topic: Graphical Analysis
 

 

35. Consider the case of two farmers, Tony and Hakim, depicted in the following figure. Both use DDT (a chemical pesticide) for their crops. The use of DDT causes an externality for swimmers down river from the farms.

(a) Show the amount of pesticides used if each uses the privately optimal level of pesticides.
(b) Show the amount of pesticides used if they are socially concerned.
(c) Why is a reduction back to XH = HT not socially desired?

(a)

(b)

(c) Not socially optimal.

 

AACSB: Analytic
Blooms: Analyze
Difficulty: 3 Hard
Topic: Graphical Analysis
 

 

36. Refer to the figures below to answer this question:

Cap-and-trade versus emissions fee when marginal social benefits are inelastic and costs are uncertain:

Cap-and-trade versus emissions fee when marginal social benefits are elastic and costs are uncertain:

a) In case of an inelastic marginal social benefit curve, what type of pollution reduction system should the government employ? Why?
b) If the social benefit curve is elastic, do you answer change?
c) What are advantages and disadvantages of Cap-and-Trade systems over Emission Fee systems when the inflation and change in marginal costs are considered?

a) When the social marginal benefit curve is inelastic then the government should employ a cap-and-trade system because it is more efficient than the emission fee system. Emission fee system allows too little pollution compared to fairly higher pollution than efficient quantity of cap-and-trade system.
b) When the social marginal benefit curve is elastic then the government should employ an emission fee system because it is more efficient. Cap-and-trade system allows too much pollution reduction compared to fairly close pollution reduction of emission fee system.
c) Cap-and-Trade systems are superior in high inflation environments since it requires no legislative or regulatory action in response to inflation. Moreover, emission fee systems are not appropriate when the marginal cost of pollution reduction is not constant. With emission fee systems, pollution reduction decreases as marginal costs increase. However with cap-and-trade systems, pollution reduction is constant as marginal costs increase. Finally if the government is uncertain about the marginal cost of pollution reduction, then the effective reduction system depends on the elasticity of marginal social benefits.

 

AACSB: Analytic
Blooms: Analyze
Difficulty: 3 Hard
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

37. Why are command- and -control regulations less flexible than incentive based systems?

Although answers will vary, the main reason is monitoring costs and the costs involved in punishment strategies for offenders. Incentive systems induce firms to act in their own best interests which are less time consuming.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

38. Which policy is more effective when handling externalities: Cap-and-trade or emissions fee?

Although answers may vary, the reader should take into account how responsive each policy is to inflation. In addition, there should be some mention of the responsiveness to cost changes and uncertainty. Therefore when marginal social benefits are inelastic and costs are higher than expected, cap-and-trade achieves too much reduction and an emissions fee achieves too little reduction.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Public Responses to Externalities: Emissions Fees and Cap-and-Trade Programs
 

 

39. List and discuss three problems that might arise when using the Coase theorem.

Bargaining costs are generally not zero. Identifying damages is difficult. There is generally some amount of asymmetric information.

 

AACSB: Reflective Thinking
Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: 2 Medium
Topic: Private Responses
 

 

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