Services
Discover
Homeschooling
Ask a Question
Log in
Sign up
Filters
Done
Question type:
Essay
Multiple Choice
Short Answer
True False
Matching
Topic
Business
Study Set
International Economics Study Set 9
Quiz 11: International Agreements: Trade, Labor, and the Environment
Path 4
Access For Free
Share
All types
Filters
Study Flashcards
Practice Exam
Learn
Question 161
Not Answered
The following payoff matrix shows outcomes of various strategies that the countries of Home and Foreign can follow to decide to regulate or not regulate pollution. The columns show Foreign's actions, and the rows show Home's actions. The values in the upper right-hand corner of each element give Foreign's net benefits; the values in the lower left-hand corner of each element give Home's net benefits. Net benefits are the environmental benefits from regulation minus the costs associated with installing pollution control equipment.
I. Using the payoff matrix, what is likely to happen if there are no international agreements to limit pollution? II. In the payoff matrix, which element represents a Nash equilibrium? III. Why is the element you selected in II a Nash equilibrium?
Question 162
Short Answer
The U.S. sugar quota sometimes causes the U.S. domestic price of sugar to be twice as high as the world price. How does the sugar quota affect the U.S. price of corn and the U.S. environment?