Chapter 16 QUIZ
Public Goods, Externalities, and Information Asymmetries
1. The
two main characteristics of a public good are:
A. production at constant marginal cost and rising demand.
B. nonexcludability and production at rising marginal cost.
C. nonrivalry and nonexcludability.
D. nonrivalry and large negative externalities.
2. Unlike
a private good, a public good:
A. has no opportunity costs.
B. has benefits available to all, including nonpayers.
C. produces no positive or negative externalities.
D. is characterized by rivalry and excludability.
3. Which
of the following is an example of a public good?
A. a weather warning system
B. a television set
C. a sofa
D. a bottle of soda
4. The
market system does not produce public goods because:
A. there is no need or demand for such goods.
B. private firms cannot stop consumers who are unwilling to pay for such
goods from benefiting from them.
C. public enterprises can produce such goods at lower cost than can
private enterprises.
D. their production seriously distorts the distribution of income.
5. Because
of the free-rider problem:
A. the market demand for a public good is overstated.
B. the market demand for a public good is nonexistent or understated.
C. government has increasingly yielded to the private sector in producing
public goods.
D. public goods often create moral hazard and adverse selection problems.
6. At
the optimal quantity of a public good:
A. marginal benefit exceeds marginal cost by the greatest amount.
B. total benefit equals total cost.
C. marginal benefit equals marginal cost.
D. marginal benefit is zero.
7. Alex,
Kara, and Susie are the only three people in a community and Alex is willing to
pay $20 for the 5th unit of a public good; Kara, $15, and Susie, $25.
Government should produce the 5th unit of the public good if the marginal cost
is less than:
A. $25.
B. $15.
C. $60.
D. $300.
8. Refer to
the above diagrams in which figures (a) and (b) show demand curves reflecting
the prices Alvin and Elmer are willing to pay for a public good, rather than do
without it. The collective willingness to pay for the 1st unit of this public
good is:
A. $18.
B. $14.
C. $10.
D. $6.
9. Refer
to the above diagrams in which figures (a) and (b) show demand curves
reflecting the prices Alvin and Elmer are willing to pay for a public good,
rather than do without it. If the marginal cost of the optimal quantity of this
public good is $10, the optimal quantity must be:
A. 1 unit.
B. 2 units.
C. 3 units.
D. 4 units.
10. Cost-benefit
analysis attempts to:
A. compare the real worth, rather than the market values, of various goods
and services.
B. compare the relative desirability of alternative distributions of
income.
C. determine whether it is better to cut government expenditures or reduce
taxes.
D. compare the benefits and costs associated with any economic project or
activity.
The
following data are for a series of increasingly extensive flood control
projects:
11. Refer
to the above data. For Plan D marginal costs and marginal benefits are:
A. $72,000 and $64,000 respectively.
B. $28,000 and $12,000 respectively.
C. $24,000 and $18,000 respectively.
D. $16,000 and $28,000 respectively.
12. Refer
to the above data. On the basis of cost-benefit analysis government should
undertake:
A. Plan D.
B. Plan C.
C. Plan B.
D. Plan A.
13. Refer
to the above data. Plan C entails:
A. marginal benefits in excess of marginal costs.
B. fewer spillovers than either Plan A or Plan B.
C. an overallocation of resources to flood control.
D. an underallocation of resources to flood control.
14. According
to the marginal-cost-marginal-benefit rule:
A. only government projects (as opposed to private projects) should be
assessed by comparing marginal costs and marginal benefits.
B. the optimal project size is the one for which MB = MC.
C. the optimal project size is the one for which MB exceeds MC by the
greatest amount.
D. project managers should attempt to minimize both MB and MC.
15. Economists
consider governments to be "wasteful:"
A. whenever they over- or underallocate resources to a project.
B. only when they overallocate resources to a project.
C. only when they underallocate resources to a project.
D. whenever they attempt to correct a market failure.
16. A
positive externality or spillover benefit occurs when:
A. product differentiation increases the variety of products available to
consumers.
B. the benefits associated with a product exceed those accruing to people
who consume it.
C. a firm produces at the P = MC output.
D. economic profits are zero in the long run.
17. Refer
to the above diagram in which S is the market supply curve and S1
is a supply curve comprising all costs of production, including external costs.
Assume that the number of people affected by these external costs is large. If
the government wishes to establish an optimal allocation of resources in this
market, it should:
A. not intervene because the market outcome is optimal.
B. subsidize consumers so that the market demand curve shifts leftward.
C. subsidize producers so that the market supply curve shifts leftward
(upward).
D. tax producers so that the market supply curve shifts leftward (upward).
18. Refer
to the above diagrams for two separate product markets. Assume that society's
optimal level of output in each market is Q0 and that
government purposely shifts the market supply curve from S to S1
in diagram (a) and from S to S2 in diagram (b). We can
conclude that the government is correcting for:
A. negative externalities in diagram (a) and positive externalities in
diagram (b).
B. positive externalities in diagram (a) and negative externalities in
diagram (b).
C. negative externalities in both diagrams.
D. positive externalities in both diagrams.
19. Refer
to the above competitive market diagram for product Z. Assume that the current
market demand and supply curves for Z are D2 and S2.
If there are substantial external benefits associated with the production of Z,
then:
A. efficient resource allocation occurs at output G and price B
because the market mechanism does not measure all benefits.
B. an output smaller than G would improve resource allocation.
C. government should levy a per unit excise tax on Z to shift the demand
curve toward D1.
D. an output greater than G would result in a more efficient
allocation of resources.
20. Refer
to the above competitive market diagram for product Z. Assume that the current
market demand and supply curves for Z are D2 and S2.
If there are substantial external costs associated with the production of Z,
then:
A. a price lower than B and an output greater than G would
improve resource allocation.
B. government should levy a per unit excise tax on Z to shift the demand
curve to the right.
C. government should levy a per unit excise tax on Z to shift the supply
curve toward S1.
D. government should subsidize the production of Z to lower equilibrium
price and increase equilibrium output.
21. Suppose
that the Anytown city government asks private citizens to donate money to
support the town's annual holiday lighting display. Assuming that the citizens
of Anytown enjoy the lighting display, the request for donations suggests
that:
A. the display creates negative externalities.
B. government should tax the producers of holiday lighting.
C. resources are currently overallocated to the provision of holiday
lighting in Anytown.
D. resources are currently underallocated to the provision of holiday
lighting in Anytown.
22. The
Coase theorem states that:
A. government should levy excise taxes on firms that generate spillover or
external costs.
B. taxes should be levied such that they change private behavior as little
as possible.
C. bargaining between private parties will remedy externality problems
where property rights are clearly defined, the number of people involved are
few, and bargaining costs are small.
D. trading of votes to secure favorable voting outcomes may increase
efficiency.
23. The
tragedy of the commons is the idea that:
A. society has a tendency to overuse and thus abuse common resources.
B. total external costs in society far outweigh total external benefits.
C. matter can be transformed to other matter or into energy but can never
vanish.
D. crime rates typically are higher in public places than where property
is privately owned.
24. Refer
to the above diagram of a market for pollution rights. The increase in the
price of pollution rights from P1 to P2will:
A. reduce the quantity of pollution rights.
B. increase the quantity of pollution rights.
C. increase the incentive for environmental groups to buy pollution
rights.
D. increase the opportunity cost of polluting.
25. Refer
to the above diagram of a market for pollution rights. Without this market for
pollution rights, the quantity (tons) of pollution would be:
A. Q3, if demand is D2.
B. Q1, if demand is D1.
C. Q2, if demand is D2.
D. Q1, if demand is D2.
26. A
cap-and-trade program causes the:
A. supply of pollution rights to be perfectly inelastic.
B. supply of pollution rights to be perfectly elastic.
C. demand for pollution rights to be perfectly inelastic.
D. demand for pollution rights to be perfectly elastic.
27. The
socially optimal amount of pollution abatement occurs where society's
marginal:
A. benefit of abatement exceeds its marginal cost of abatement by the
greatest amount.
B. benefit of abatement equals its marginal cost of abatement.
C. benefit of abatement is zero.
D. cost of abatement is at its maximum.
28. Buyers
will opt out of markets in which:
A. there are significant negative externalities.
B. standardized products are being produced.
C. there is inadequate information about sellers and their products.
D. there are only foreign sellers.
29. Sellers
will opt out of markets in which:
A. there are significant negative externalities.
B. standardized products exist.
C. there are only foreign buyers.
D. information about buyers is inadequate, and some buyers can impose high
costs on the sellers.
30. Because
the Federal government typically provides disaster relief to farmers, many
farmers do not buy crop insurance even through it is federally subsidized. This
illustrates:
A. the adverse selection problem.
B. the moral hazard problem.
C. a failure of the market for externalities.
D. the existence of positive externalities.
31. On
buying a car having airbags, Indy begins to drive recklessly. This is an
example of the:
A. principal-agent problem.
B. adverse selection problem.
C. moral hazard problem.
D. free-rider problem.
32. On
learning that his auto transmission is about to fail, Ray Roma sells his car to
an unsuspecting buyer. This circumstance illustrates:
A. asymmetric information.
B. the Coase theorem.
C. the moral hazard problem.
D. the principal-agent problem.