Deck 28: Environmental Protection

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Question
External costs are

A)Domestic economic impacts of foreign events.
B)The difference between social and private costs.
C)Outside costs that producers absorb.
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Question
The reason pollution occurs is because people tend to

A)Consider the impact of their activities on society first.
B)Maximize their personal welfare,balancing private benefits against private costs.
C)Maximize their personal welfare,balancing social benefits against social costs.
Question
External costs occur because

A)Private costs do not reflect the full costs to society.
B)Government failure increases costs for the firm.
C)All costs are absorbed by the firm.
Question
In general,a firm's efficiency decision will result in

A)A plant that maximizes profits.
B)A pollution-causing production process if that process minimizes costs.
C)An unpolluted environment.
Question
According to EPA studies,the United States generates over ____ billion tons of solid waste each year.

A)50
B)100
C)5
Question
The behavior of profit-maximizing producers is guided by

A)Philanthropy.
B)Self-interest.
C)Aesthetic concerns.
Question
Thermal pollution is brought about by the discharge of

A)Sulfur dioxide.
B)Steam or heated water.
C)Carbon dioxide.
Question
If the social costs of an economic activity are $200 and the private costs are $200,then the external costs of the activity are ____,and market failure _______.

A)$0;does not occur
B)$400;does not occur
C)$0;occurs
Question
When external costs are present,

A)There is market failure.
B)There is government failure.
C)Private costs are greater than social costs.
Question
Which of the following is assumed to be the most important motivation for producers?

A)The desire to minimize external costs.
B)The desire to maximize economic profits.
C)The desire to minimize social costs above private costs.
Question
According to the text,which of the following is a form of water pollution?

A)Slaughter waste.
B)Thermal pollution.
C)Smog.
Question
From an economic standpoint,the pursuit of a zero-pollution environment is

A)The morally correct strategy,and costs should not be a consideration.
B)Probably not in society's interest because of the high opportunity costs.
C)The economically correct strategy.
Question
External costs are the difference between

A)Social costs and private costs.
B)Benefits and costs.
C)Average and marginal costs.
Question
Which of the following is not the case when social costs are greater than private costs?

A)The market's price signals are flawed.
B)Resources are allocated efficiently.
C)There is market failure.
Question
Assigning values to environmental damage is relatively

A)Easy because of current scientific techniques.
B)Easy because all items have a market value.
C)Difficult because many items have intangible benefits and thus do not have a market price.
Question
According to the text,which of the following is the prime cause of the greenhouse effect?

A)Sulfur dioxide.
B)Nitrogen oxide.
C)Carbon dioxide.
Question
If a firm adopts a production process that is costly in order to reduce pollution,the result is

A)A decrease in the firm's MC curve and a decrease in the firm's profits.
B)An increase in the firm's ATC curve and an increase in the firm's profits.
C)A decrease in the profit-maximizing rate of output and a decrease in the firm's profits.
Question
An external cost is borne by

A)The producer of the good.
B)The consumers of the good.
C)A third party to the market transaction.
Question
Electric power plants account for over ____ percent of all thermal discharges.

A)80
B)60
C)40
Question
Sophisticated waste treatment plants can reduce organic pollution by up to ____ percent.

A)99
B)95
C)75
Question
When the government requires a firm to pay an emission charge in proportion to its pollution,

A)Both average total costs and marginal costs rise.
B)Average total costs rise,but marginal costs do not.
C)Marginal costs rise,but average total costs do not.
Question
By altering market incentives,the government tries to shift

A)External costs to society.
B)External costs to the producer.
C)Private costs to society.
Question
Which of the following is not a market incentive to discourage pollution?

A)Emission charges.
B)Higher user fees.
C)Regulatory intervention.
Question
If a manufacturer does not have to pay for its contribution to pollution,it will produce

A)Too much output from a social viewpoint.
B)Inefficiently from a private viewpoint.
C)Unprofitably from a private viewpoint.
Question
A completely successful emission charge would

A)Shift the private MC curve until the curve intersects with price at zero output and pollution is completely eliminated.
B)Shift the private MC curve to the same position as the social MC curve.
C)Shift the social MC curve to the same position as the private MC curve.
Question
Social costs are

A)The total resource costs of an economic activity.
B)Usually less than private costs.
C)The costs of an economic activity borne by the producer.
Question
All of the following are negative externalities in production except

A)Secondhand smoke in a restaurant.
B)Acid rain produced by power plants.
C)Carbon dioxide emissions from the production of steel.
Question
When private and social costs are equal,

A)Market failure occurs.
B)There are no external costs.
C)Government failure occurs.
Question
A five-cent container deposit on bottles

A)Decreases the incentive to recycle.
B)Increases the incentive to recycle.
C)Makes it more profitable for firms to use these containers.
Question
The market will overproduce goods that have external costs because

A)Producers have lower costs than society has.
B)Producers experience higher costs than society.
C)The government is not able to produce these goods.
Question
Under the market mechanism,a market characterized by external costs will produce too

A)Little output and too much pollution.
B)Much output and too much pollution.
C)Little output and too little pollution.
Question
Which of the following is a market incentive to discourage pollution?

A)Emission charges and user charges.
B)User charges and government regulation.
C)Command-and-control options.
Question
An example of a negative externality in consumption is

A)A power plant's release of thermal pollution into a nearby river.
B)A passenger on a train littering.
C)A large cattle farm creating air pollution.
Question
A power plant in Illinois produces electricity by burning coal.This results in acid rain that kills trees and wildlife in New York.This is an example of

A)An external cost.
B)Inequity.
C)A public bad.
Question
If a firm that pollutes wants to maximize profits,it will produce where

A)The social value of production equals the social cost of production.
B)Private and social costs are equal.
C)Marginal revenue and private marginal cost are equal.
Question
If firms were charged the full social opportunity cost of the resources they used,there would be

A)No external costs.
B)Government failure.
C)Market failure.
Question
When external costs exist,

A)There is government failure.
B)Market prices do not convey the full costs of production.
C)The market achieves the optimal mix of output.
Question
In order to maximize social welfare,a firm's production of a good should occur at the output where

A)Social marginal cost equals social marginal benefit.
B)Price equals social marginal revenue.
C)Marginal revenue equals price.
Question
A polluting company can be billed in proportion to its pollution through

A)Higher user fees.
B)Emission charges.
C)Privatization.
Question
An emission charge

A)Reduces private marginal cost and reduces output.
B)Reduces private marginal cost and increases output.
C)Increases private marginal cost and reduces output.
Question
Excessive process regulation may

A)Raise the costs of environmental cleanup.
B)Encourage cost-saving innovation.
C)Cause market failure.
Question
If the tax on gasoline is increased to provide incentives to curb air pollution,then the tax serves as

A)A user fee.
B)A command-and-control standard.
C)A pollution fine.
Question
The optimal rate of pollution occurs where

A)MR = MC for the production of the good that produces pollution.
B)The marginal benefit equals the marginal cost of pollution abatement.
C)The marginal benefit of pollution abatement is zero.
Question
Tradable pollution permits,when compared to command-and-control options,tend to

A)Provide the same amount of pollution abatement at a higher cost.
B)Provide the same amount of pollution abatement at a lower cost.
C)Provide the same amount of pollution abatement at the same cost.
Question
A market for power plant pollution rights will

A)Reduce the total amount of pollution by power plants beyond the required reduction level.
B)Lower pollution control costs.
C)Result in all power plants meeting pollution standards at lower costs.
Question
Many economists would argue that

A)The optimal amount of pollution is greater than zero.
B)All pollution should be eliminated.
C)The market mechanism can handle pollution without any government intervention.
Question
If the government imposed a green tax on gasoline,ceteris paribus,the price of gasoline should

A)Increase.
B)Decrease.
C)Remain unchanged.
Question
The primary purpose of tradable pollution permits is to

A)Reduce the level of pollution to optimal levels.
B)Reduce the cost of pollution control.
C)Eliminate private costs.
Question
Pollution control efforts

A)Are free of opportunity costs.
B)Change what and how much is produced.
C)Reduce private marginal costs.
Question
Government intervention that fails to improve economic outcomes is known as

A)Social failure.
B)Government failure.
C)Market failure.
Question
Laws requiring the sorting and recycling of trash are an example of

A)Pollution fines.
B)Higher user fees.
C)Process regulation.
Question
Emission charges,user fees,and pollution fines increase the _______ of polluting.

A)opportunity cost
B)market failure
C)external costs
Question
Which of the following is an example of bypassing the market through regulation to achieve environmental protection?

A)Privatization.
B)Command-and-control standards.
C)Pollution fines.
Question
When environmental regulations continue long after they are obsolete,there is

A)Privatization.
B)Deregulation.
C)Government failure.
Question
When the government requires specific processes for reducing pollution,it is using

A)A command-and-control approach.
B)Green taxes.
C)A tradable permit program.
Question
By implementing user fees,the government tries to shift

A)Private costs to society.
B)Social costs to the producer.
C)External costs to users.
Question
The command-and-control strategy for pollution reduction refers to

A)Material recycling.
B)Standards used to reduce pollution.
C)The use of tradable permits.
Question
The command-and-control approach to pollution reduction

A)May be less efficient than a market-based option.
B)Lowers private marginal costs.
C)Lowers market prices.
Question
The Comprehensive Environmental Response,Compensation,and Liability Act of 1980 reduced pollution through

A)Central planning.
B)Command-and-control regulatory standards.
C)Pollution fines.
Question
The Clean Air Acts of 1970 and 1990 reduced pollution through

A)Market incentives.
B)Command-and-control regulatory standards.
C)Privatization.
Question
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government commands each firm to reduce its emissions by one ton each.What is the total cost?</strong> A)$600. B)$780. C)$920. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government commands each firm to reduce its emissions by one ton each.What is the total cost?

A)$600.
B)$780.
C)$920.
Question
<strong>  In Figure 28.1,if pollution costs are external,the rate of output will be</strong> A)Less than 200 units. B)200 units. C)320 units. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
In Figure 28.1,if pollution costs are external,the rate of output will be

A)Less than 200 units.
B)200 units.
C)320 units.
Question
<strong>  In Figure 28.1,if the rate of output is 320 units,</strong> A)Social costs exceed private costs. B)There is government failure. C)Pollution costs are internalized. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
In Figure 28.1,if the rate of output is 320 units,

A)Social costs exceed private costs.
B)There is government failure.
C)Pollution costs are internalized.
Question
A chemical-producing firm is located just upstream from an electric power plant.Instead of the more expensive procedure of burying its wastes,the chemical-producing firm begins dumping its waste into the stream.This causes increased variable costs for the power plant,which uses water from the stream to cool its turbines.From society's viewpoint,the chemical producer's pollution causes an

A)Overproduction of chemicals and an underproduction of electric power.
B)Underproduction of chemicals and an overproduction of electric power.
C)Optimal production of chemicals and electric power.
Question
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The most efficient transaction would result in</strong> A)Zero pollution. B)The steel plant reducing its emissions. C)The paper plant reducing its emissions. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The most efficient transaction would result in

A)Zero pollution.
B)The steel plant reducing its emissions.
C)The paper plant reducing its emissions.
Question
The costs of pollution control will

A)Always be borne entirely by the pollution producer.
B)Always be passed on completely to the consumer.
C)Be distributed between the producer and the consumer.
Question
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The total cost to reduce emissions by a total of two tons could be as low as</strong> A)$0. B)$480. C)$900. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The total cost to reduce emissions by a total of two tons could be as low as

A)$0.
B)$480.
C)$900.
Question
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The most efficient transaction would result in</strong> A)An increase in emissions by the steel plant and a reduction by the paper plant. B)A reduction in emissions by the paper plant and no change for the steel plant. C)An increase in emissions by both plants. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The most efficient transaction would result in

A)An increase in emissions by the steel plant and a reduction by the paper plant.
B)A reduction in emissions by the paper plant and no change for the steel plant.
C)An increase in emissions by both plants.
Question
The marginal cost to society of reducing pollution increases as the level of pollution reduction increases because of the law of

A)Demand.
B)Diminishing returns.
C)Diminishing marginal utility.
Question
<strong>  Refer to Figure 28.2.If there were no emissions fees on a firm,its marginal cost curve would be</strong> A)MC<sub>1.</sub> B)MC<sub>3.</sub> C)MC<sub>2.</sub> <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 28.2.If there were no emissions fees on a firm,its marginal cost curve would be

A)MC1.
B)MC3.
C)MC2.
Question
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.What would be the price of a permit to emit the second ton of pollutants?</strong> A)Less than $200. B)Between $200 and $280. C)Between $280 and $400. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.What would be the price of a permit to emit the second ton of pollutants?

A)Less than $200.
B)Between $200 and $280.
C)Between $280 and $400.
Question
In cost-benefit analysis,the government should intervene as long as

A)The government corrects market failures without government cost.
B)The value of government failure exceeds the value of market failure.
C)The improvement in the environment exceeds the costs.
Question
<strong>  Refer to Figure 28.2.Assume this firm initially has marginal costs equal to Private MC<sub>1</sub> and is polluting.If the government decides to use emission charges to reduce pollution,the firm's MC curve will shift to</strong> A)MC<sub>3</sub> and the rate of output will decrease. B)MC<sub>3</sub> and the rate of output will increase. C)MC<sub>2</sub> and the rate of output will decrease. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 28.2.Assume this firm initially has marginal costs equal to Private MC1 and is polluting.If the government decides to use emission charges to reduce pollution,the firm's MC curve will shift to

A)MC3 and the rate of output will decrease.
B)MC3 and the rate of output will increase.
C)MC2 and the rate of output will decrease.
Question
The marginal cost of reducing pollution

A)Rises as the environment gets cleaner.
B)Falls as the environment gets cleaner.
C)Is constant.
Question
<strong>  Refer to Figure 28.2.If this firm is producing a product that does not generate any externalities,the allocatively efficient output would occur where</strong> A)Price = MC<sub>3</sub>. B)Price = MC<sub>1</sub>. C)Price = MC<sub>2</sub>. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 28.2.If this firm is producing a product that does not generate any externalities,the allocatively efficient output would occur where

A)Price = MC3.
B)Price = MC1.
C)Price = MC2.
Question
<strong>  In Figure 28.1,emission fees will</strong> A)Reduce external benefits. B)Increase the marginal cost of production. C)Raise marginal revenues. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
In Figure 28.1,emission fees will

A)Reduce external benefits.
B)Increase the marginal cost of production.
C)Raise marginal revenues.
Question
A chemical-producing firm is located just upstream from an electric power plant.Instead of the more expensive procedure of burying its wastes,the chemical-producing firm begins dumping its waste into the stream.This causes increased variable costs for the power plant,which uses water from the stream to cool its turbines.The chemical producer's dumping of waste into the stream causes

A)The MC of the chemical firm to shift downward and the MC of the power company to shift upward.
B)The MC of the chemical firm to shift upward and the MC of the power company to shift downward.
C)Only the MC of the chemical firm to shift upward.
Question
When thinking about the real costs of environmental cleanup,we should take into consideration

A)The total costs of the cleanup as estimated by the Environmental Protection Agency.
B)A comparison of the costs of cleanup to the large size of the U.S.economy.
C)The marginal costs but not the marginal benefits.
Question
The marginal benefit of reducing pollution

A)Rises as the environment gets cleaner.
B)Falls as the environment gets cleaner.
C)Is constant.
Question
<strong>  In Figure 28.1,if the externality is internalized,the rate of output will be</strong> A)Less than 200 units. B)200 units. C)320 units. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
In Figure 28.1,if the externality is internalized,the rate of output will be

A)Less than 200 units.
B)200 units.
C)320 units.
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Deck 28: Environmental Protection
1
External costs are

A)Domestic economic impacts of foreign events.
B)The difference between social and private costs.
C)Outside costs that producers absorb.
The difference between social and private costs.
2
The reason pollution occurs is because people tend to

A)Consider the impact of their activities on society first.
B)Maximize their personal welfare,balancing private benefits against private costs.
C)Maximize their personal welfare,balancing social benefits against social costs.
Maximize their personal welfare,balancing private benefits against private costs.
3
External costs occur because

A)Private costs do not reflect the full costs to society.
B)Government failure increases costs for the firm.
C)All costs are absorbed by the firm.
Private costs do not reflect the full costs to society.
4
In general,a firm's efficiency decision will result in

A)A plant that maximizes profits.
B)A pollution-causing production process if that process minimizes costs.
C)An unpolluted environment.
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k this deck
5
According to EPA studies,the United States generates over ____ billion tons of solid waste each year.

A)50
B)100
C)5
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6
The behavior of profit-maximizing producers is guided by

A)Philanthropy.
B)Self-interest.
C)Aesthetic concerns.
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k this deck
7
Thermal pollution is brought about by the discharge of

A)Sulfur dioxide.
B)Steam or heated water.
C)Carbon dioxide.
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k this deck
8
If the social costs of an economic activity are $200 and the private costs are $200,then the external costs of the activity are ____,and market failure _______.

A)$0;does not occur
B)$400;does not occur
C)$0;occurs
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9
When external costs are present,

A)There is market failure.
B)There is government failure.
C)Private costs are greater than social costs.
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10
Which of the following is assumed to be the most important motivation for producers?

A)The desire to minimize external costs.
B)The desire to maximize economic profits.
C)The desire to minimize social costs above private costs.
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11
According to the text,which of the following is a form of water pollution?

A)Slaughter waste.
B)Thermal pollution.
C)Smog.
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k this deck
12
From an economic standpoint,the pursuit of a zero-pollution environment is

A)The morally correct strategy,and costs should not be a consideration.
B)Probably not in society's interest because of the high opportunity costs.
C)The economically correct strategy.
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13
External costs are the difference between

A)Social costs and private costs.
B)Benefits and costs.
C)Average and marginal costs.
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14
Which of the following is not the case when social costs are greater than private costs?

A)The market's price signals are flawed.
B)Resources are allocated efficiently.
C)There is market failure.
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15
Assigning values to environmental damage is relatively

A)Easy because of current scientific techniques.
B)Easy because all items have a market value.
C)Difficult because many items have intangible benefits and thus do not have a market price.
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k this deck
16
According to the text,which of the following is the prime cause of the greenhouse effect?

A)Sulfur dioxide.
B)Nitrogen oxide.
C)Carbon dioxide.
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k this deck
17
If a firm adopts a production process that is costly in order to reduce pollution,the result is

A)A decrease in the firm's MC curve and a decrease in the firm's profits.
B)An increase in the firm's ATC curve and an increase in the firm's profits.
C)A decrease in the profit-maximizing rate of output and a decrease in the firm's profits.
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18
An external cost is borne by

A)The producer of the good.
B)The consumers of the good.
C)A third party to the market transaction.
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19
Electric power plants account for over ____ percent of all thermal discharges.

A)80
B)60
C)40
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k this deck
20
Sophisticated waste treatment plants can reduce organic pollution by up to ____ percent.

A)99
B)95
C)75
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
When the government requires a firm to pay an emission charge in proportion to its pollution,

A)Both average total costs and marginal costs rise.
B)Average total costs rise,but marginal costs do not.
C)Marginal costs rise,but average total costs do not.
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22
By altering market incentives,the government tries to shift

A)External costs to society.
B)External costs to the producer.
C)Private costs to society.
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k this deck
23
Which of the following is not a market incentive to discourage pollution?

A)Emission charges.
B)Higher user fees.
C)Regulatory intervention.
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24
If a manufacturer does not have to pay for its contribution to pollution,it will produce

A)Too much output from a social viewpoint.
B)Inefficiently from a private viewpoint.
C)Unprofitably from a private viewpoint.
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25
A completely successful emission charge would

A)Shift the private MC curve until the curve intersects with price at zero output and pollution is completely eliminated.
B)Shift the private MC curve to the same position as the social MC curve.
C)Shift the social MC curve to the same position as the private MC curve.
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26
Social costs are

A)The total resource costs of an economic activity.
B)Usually less than private costs.
C)The costs of an economic activity borne by the producer.
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27
All of the following are negative externalities in production except

A)Secondhand smoke in a restaurant.
B)Acid rain produced by power plants.
C)Carbon dioxide emissions from the production of steel.
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28
When private and social costs are equal,

A)Market failure occurs.
B)There are no external costs.
C)Government failure occurs.
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29
A five-cent container deposit on bottles

A)Decreases the incentive to recycle.
B)Increases the incentive to recycle.
C)Makes it more profitable for firms to use these containers.
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k this deck
30
The market will overproduce goods that have external costs because

A)Producers have lower costs than society has.
B)Producers experience higher costs than society.
C)The government is not able to produce these goods.
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31
Under the market mechanism,a market characterized by external costs will produce too

A)Little output and too much pollution.
B)Much output and too much pollution.
C)Little output and too little pollution.
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32
Which of the following is a market incentive to discourage pollution?

A)Emission charges and user charges.
B)User charges and government regulation.
C)Command-and-control options.
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33
An example of a negative externality in consumption is

A)A power plant's release of thermal pollution into a nearby river.
B)A passenger on a train littering.
C)A large cattle farm creating air pollution.
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34
A power plant in Illinois produces electricity by burning coal.This results in acid rain that kills trees and wildlife in New York.This is an example of

A)An external cost.
B)Inequity.
C)A public bad.
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35
If a firm that pollutes wants to maximize profits,it will produce where

A)The social value of production equals the social cost of production.
B)Private and social costs are equal.
C)Marginal revenue and private marginal cost are equal.
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36
If firms were charged the full social opportunity cost of the resources they used,there would be

A)No external costs.
B)Government failure.
C)Market failure.
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37
When external costs exist,

A)There is government failure.
B)Market prices do not convey the full costs of production.
C)The market achieves the optimal mix of output.
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38
In order to maximize social welfare,a firm's production of a good should occur at the output where

A)Social marginal cost equals social marginal benefit.
B)Price equals social marginal revenue.
C)Marginal revenue equals price.
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39
A polluting company can be billed in proportion to its pollution through

A)Higher user fees.
B)Emission charges.
C)Privatization.
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40
An emission charge

A)Reduces private marginal cost and reduces output.
B)Reduces private marginal cost and increases output.
C)Increases private marginal cost and reduces output.
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41
Excessive process regulation may

A)Raise the costs of environmental cleanup.
B)Encourage cost-saving innovation.
C)Cause market failure.
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42
If the tax on gasoline is increased to provide incentives to curb air pollution,then the tax serves as

A)A user fee.
B)A command-and-control standard.
C)A pollution fine.
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43
The optimal rate of pollution occurs where

A)MR = MC for the production of the good that produces pollution.
B)The marginal benefit equals the marginal cost of pollution abatement.
C)The marginal benefit of pollution abatement is zero.
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44
Tradable pollution permits,when compared to command-and-control options,tend to

A)Provide the same amount of pollution abatement at a higher cost.
B)Provide the same amount of pollution abatement at a lower cost.
C)Provide the same amount of pollution abatement at the same cost.
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45
A market for power plant pollution rights will

A)Reduce the total amount of pollution by power plants beyond the required reduction level.
B)Lower pollution control costs.
C)Result in all power plants meeting pollution standards at lower costs.
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46
Many economists would argue that

A)The optimal amount of pollution is greater than zero.
B)All pollution should be eliminated.
C)The market mechanism can handle pollution without any government intervention.
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47
If the government imposed a green tax on gasoline,ceteris paribus,the price of gasoline should

A)Increase.
B)Decrease.
C)Remain unchanged.
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48
The primary purpose of tradable pollution permits is to

A)Reduce the level of pollution to optimal levels.
B)Reduce the cost of pollution control.
C)Eliminate private costs.
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49
Pollution control efforts

A)Are free of opportunity costs.
B)Change what and how much is produced.
C)Reduce private marginal costs.
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50
Government intervention that fails to improve economic outcomes is known as

A)Social failure.
B)Government failure.
C)Market failure.
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51
Laws requiring the sorting and recycling of trash are an example of

A)Pollution fines.
B)Higher user fees.
C)Process regulation.
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52
Emission charges,user fees,and pollution fines increase the _______ of polluting.

A)opportunity cost
B)market failure
C)external costs
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53
Which of the following is an example of bypassing the market through regulation to achieve environmental protection?

A)Privatization.
B)Command-and-control standards.
C)Pollution fines.
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54
When environmental regulations continue long after they are obsolete,there is

A)Privatization.
B)Deregulation.
C)Government failure.
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55
When the government requires specific processes for reducing pollution,it is using

A)A command-and-control approach.
B)Green taxes.
C)A tradable permit program.
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56
By implementing user fees,the government tries to shift

A)Private costs to society.
B)Social costs to the producer.
C)External costs to users.
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57
The command-and-control strategy for pollution reduction refers to

A)Material recycling.
B)Standards used to reduce pollution.
C)The use of tradable permits.
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58
The command-and-control approach to pollution reduction

A)May be less efficient than a market-based option.
B)Lowers private marginal costs.
C)Lowers market prices.
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59
The Comprehensive Environmental Response,Compensation,and Liability Act of 1980 reduced pollution through

A)Central planning.
B)Command-and-control regulatory standards.
C)Pollution fines.
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60
The Clean Air Acts of 1970 and 1990 reduced pollution through

A)Market incentives.
B)Command-and-control regulatory standards.
C)Privatization.
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61
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government commands each firm to reduce its emissions by one ton each.What is the total cost?</strong> A)$600. B)$780. C)$920.
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government commands each firm to reduce its emissions by one ton each.What is the total cost?

A)$600.
B)$780.
C)$920.
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62
<strong>  In Figure 28.1,if pollution costs are external,the rate of output will be</strong> A)Less than 200 units. B)200 units. C)320 units.
In Figure 28.1,if pollution costs are external,the rate of output will be

A)Less than 200 units.
B)200 units.
C)320 units.
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63
<strong>  In Figure 28.1,if the rate of output is 320 units,</strong> A)Social costs exceed private costs. B)There is government failure. C)Pollution costs are internalized.
In Figure 28.1,if the rate of output is 320 units,

A)Social costs exceed private costs.
B)There is government failure.
C)Pollution costs are internalized.
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64
A chemical-producing firm is located just upstream from an electric power plant.Instead of the more expensive procedure of burying its wastes,the chemical-producing firm begins dumping its waste into the stream.This causes increased variable costs for the power plant,which uses water from the stream to cool its turbines.From society's viewpoint,the chemical producer's pollution causes an

A)Overproduction of chemicals and an underproduction of electric power.
B)Underproduction of chemicals and an overproduction of electric power.
C)Optimal production of chemicals and electric power.
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65
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The most efficient transaction would result in</strong> A)Zero pollution. B)The steel plant reducing its emissions. C)The paper plant reducing its emissions.
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The most efficient transaction would result in

A)Zero pollution.
B)The steel plant reducing its emissions.
C)The paper plant reducing its emissions.
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66
The costs of pollution control will

A)Always be borne entirely by the pollution producer.
B)Always be passed on completely to the consumer.
C)Be distributed between the producer and the consumer.
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67
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The total cost to reduce emissions by a total of two tons could be as low as</strong> A)$0. B)$480. C)$900.
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The total cost to reduce emissions by a total of two tons could be as low as

A)$0.
B)$480.
C)$900.
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68
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The most efficient transaction would result in</strong> A)An increase in emissions by the steel plant and a reduction by the paper plant. B)A reduction in emissions by the paper plant and no change for the steel plant. C)An increase in emissions by both plants.
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.The most efficient transaction would result in

A)An increase in emissions by the steel plant and a reduction by the paper plant.
B)A reduction in emissions by the paper plant and no change for the steel plant.
C)An increase in emissions by both plants.
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69
The marginal cost to society of reducing pollution increases as the level of pollution reduction increases because of the law of

A)Demand.
B)Diminishing returns.
C)Diminishing marginal utility.
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70
<strong>  Refer to Figure 28.2.If there were no emissions fees on a firm,its marginal cost curve would be</strong> A)MC<sub>1.</sub> B)MC<sub>3.</sub> C)MC<sub>2.</sub>
Refer to Figure 28.2.If there were no emissions fees on a firm,its marginal cost curve would be

A)MC1.
B)MC3.
C)MC2.
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71
<strong>  Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.What would be the price of a permit to emit the second ton of pollutants?</strong> A)Less than $200. B)Between $200 and $280. C)Between $280 and $400.
Refer to Table 28.1.Suppose the government allows these two firms to trade pollution permits.What would be the price of a permit to emit the second ton of pollutants?

A)Less than $200.
B)Between $200 and $280.
C)Between $280 and $400.
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72
In cost-benefit analysis,the government should intervene as long as

A)The government corrects market failures without government cost.
B)The value of government failure exceeds the value of market failure.
C)The improvement in the environment exceeds the costs.
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73
<strong>  Refer to Figure 28.2.Assume this firm initially has marginal costs equal to Private MC<sub>1</sub> and is polluting.If the government decides to use emission charges to reduce pollution,the firm's MC curve will shift to</strong> A)MC<sub>3</sub> and the rate of output will decrease. B)MC<sub>3</sub> and the rate of output will increase. C)MC<sub>2</sub> and the rate of output will decrease.
Refer to Figure 28.2.Assume this firm initially has marginal costs equal to Private MC1 and is polluting.If the government decides to use emission charges to reduce pollution,the firm's MC curve will shift to

A)MC3 and the rate of output will decrease.
B)MC3 and the rate of output will increase.
C)MC2 and the rate of output will decrease.
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74
The marginal cost of reducing pollution

A)Rises as the environment gets cleaner.
B)Falls as the environment gets cleaner.
C)Is constant.
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75
<strong>  Refer to Figure 28.2.If this firm is producing a product that does not generate any externalities,the allocatively efficient output would occur where</strong> A)Price = MC<sub>3</sub>. B)Price = MC<sub>1</sub>. C)Price = MC<sub>2</sub>.
Refer to Figure 28.2.If this firm is producing a product that does not generate any externalities,the allocatively efficient output would occur where

A)Price = MC3.
B)Price = MC1.
C)Price = MC2.
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76
<strong>  In Figure 28.1,emission fees will</strong> A)Reduce external benefits. B)Increase the marginal cost of production. C)Raise marginal revenues.
In Figure 28.1,emission fees will

A)Reduce external benefits.
B)Increase the marginal cost of production.
C)Raise marginal revenues.
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77
A chemical-producing firm is located just upstream from an electric power plant.Instead of the more expensive procedure of burying its wastes,the chemical-producing firm begins dumping its waste into the stream.This causes increased variable costs for the power plant,which uses water from the stream to cool its turbines.The chemical producer's dumping of waste into the stream causes

A)The MC of the chemical firm to shift downward and the MC of the power company to shift upward.
B)The MC of the chemical firm to shift upward and the MC of the power company to shift downward.
C)Only the MC of the chemical firm to shift upward.
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78
When thinking about the real costs of environmental cleanup,we should take into consideration

A)The total costs of the cleanup as estimated by the Environmental Protection Agency.
B)A comparison of the costs of cleanup to the large size of the U.S.economy.
C)The marginal costs but not the marginal benefits.
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79
The marginal benefit of reducing pollution

A)Rises as the environment gets cleaner.
B)Falls as the environment gets cleaner.
C)Is constant.
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80
<strong>  In Figure 28.1,if the externality is internalized,the rate of output will be</strong> A)Less than 200 units. B)200 units. C)320 units.
In Figure 28.1,if the externality is internalized,the rate of output will be

A)Less than 200 units.
B)200 units.
C)320 units.
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