A) consumption of a common resource good.
B) production of a public good.
C) consumption of a club good.
D) production of a private good.
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Multiple Choice
A) a strong incentive to kill as many elephants as he can find.
B) a strong incentive to protect the elephants.
C) the ability to save the elephants.
D) None of the above is correct.
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Multiple Choice
A) are politically unpopular because people do not like the idea of paying for a good that they used to consume without paying for it directly.
B) rise when traffic volume increases to ensure the speed on the road is kept high.
C) are an effective way of correcting the common resource problem on roads.
D) All of the above are correct.
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Multiple Choice
A) increase the number of bears through breeding programs.
B) have Congress increase the entrance fees.
C) decrease management and maintenance of facilities.
D) reduce the number of improved camping facilities.
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Multiple Choice
A) a sweater
B) a slice of pizza
C) a Toyota Prius
D) cable TV service
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) private markets tend to undersupply public goods.
B) the federal government spends too many resources on national defense and not enough resources on medical research.
C) fireworks displays have become increasingly dangerous.
D) poverty has increased.
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) pizza,cable TV
B) pair of pants,clean air
C) clean air,mathematical theorem
D) basic research,fireworks display
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) private goods.
B) club goods.
C) common resources.
D) public goods.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) no externalities.
B) positive externalities.
C) negative externalities.
D) rivalries in consumption.
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Essay
Correct Answer
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View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) 1
B) 2
C) 3
D) 4
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) pair of pants,uncongested toll road
B) pair of pants,fireworks display
C) fish in the ocean,national defense
D) uncongested toll road,uncongested nontoll road
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Lobsters are rival but not excludable.
B) The lobster population is an example of the tragedy of the commons.
C) Reducing the quota on the number of lobsters any fisher can catch would have a protective effect on the lobster population.
D) If left unregulated,the lobster population will likely increase.
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Multiple Choice
A) Private markets could easily solve them if governments left the markets alone.
B) They would all go away if the government sponsored an intensive public-information campaign.
C) They are all the result of a failure to establish clear property rights over something of value.
D) They are all the result of a failure of corrective taxes.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the survey must have overstated how much the library was worth to each resident;otherwise,you would have collected $500,000 in donations.
B) the cost of the library exceeded the social benefits.
C) the library was an example of the Tragedy of the Commons.
D) most residents of the town are probably free-riders at the library.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) install the walkway because the estimated benefit is twice the cost.
B) be indifferent between installing and not installing the walkway because the estimated benefit equals the cost.
C) not install the walkway,since the cost is twice the estimated benefit.
D) install the walkway,since the cost of even a single life is too great not to take action.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A.
B) B.
C) C.
D) D.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
Essay
Correct Answer
verified
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