Economics
423, Midterm Examination #1, Spring 2002 – Professor Hackett
Name:
____________Key_____________________
PART
I: Short answer (8 or 9 points each). Clearly label your answer to parts (a),
(b), (c), etc.
1.
(9 pts) Suppose that in addition to the status quo (current management system),
four policy options are being considered in the context of a natural resource
management decision. Five members of society are affected by the management
decision. The table below shows how these five people feel about the proposed
management options relative to the status quo. The numbers represent the amount
(in units of utility) by which the different options make them better off or
worse off relative to the status quo.
|
|
Jethro |
Liu |
Susan |
Antonio |
Kim |
Total |
|
Option
A |
50 |
-10 |
20 |
31 |
100 |
191 |
|
Option
B |
20 |
0 |
10 |
-10 |
150 |
170 |
|
Option
C |
0 |
5 |
5 |
20 |
20 |
50 |
|
Option
D |
-20 |
20 |
0 |
-20 |
200 |
180 |
1.a.
Add up the total utility for each option and report it in the table above.
1.b.
Which of the options above, if any, satisfies the Pareto criterion for
efficiency? ____C____
1.c.
Which of the options above, if any, satisfies the Kaldor-Hicks criterion for
efficiency? ____A_____
1.d.
Which of the options above, if any, is utilitarian-ethical based on the
standard model? ____A_____
2.
(8 pts) (a) Define a negative externality. (b) Provide one clear example of a
negative externality. (c) Briefly explain how negative externalities distort
otherwise well-functioning competitive markets and lead to market failure. (d)
Briefly describe one type of government policy intervention that might resolve
the market failure due to negative externalities.
a. An
uncompensated cost generated as a byproduct of production and exchange that is
imposed on other members of society (and aspects of the environment that they
are concerned about).
b. Pollution
from a power plant.
c. Firms
supply along the private-cost supply rather than the social-cost supply,
resulting in price being based on marginal private cost rather than marginal
social cost; this subsidized price induces consumers to buy too much of the
good/service generating the (-) externality.
d. Pigouvian
taxes.
3.
(8 pts) (a) Define a positive externality. (b) Provide one clear example of a
positive externality. (c) Briefly explain how positive externalities distort
otherwise well-functioning competitive markets and lead to market failure. (d)
Briefly describe one type of government policy intervention that might resolve
the market failure due to positive externalities.
a. An
unpaid-for benefit generated as a byproduct of production and exchange that is
enjoyed by other members of society.
b. Open space
vistas/wildlife habitat/flood water storage provided by ag lands.
c. Market
demand reflects private benefits to the buyers, but not the full social
benefits; therefore market demand is understated, and not enough of the
good/service generating the (+) externality is produced and consumed (in the
example in b. above, not enough ag lands are kept in ag use rather than
converted to development).
d. Consumer
(or producer) subsidies.
PART
II: Matching (3 points each). There is one uniquely correct match that connects
a word or phrase on the left with a description on the right. Only clear and
unambiguous answers can be marked as correct.
|
Word or Phrase |
Description |
|
a. Transaction costs |
1. __Q__
Bases the ethics of an action on the intrinsic rightness of the
action. |
|
b. State (government)
property |
2. __P__
Bases the ethics of an action on the likely outcomes of the action. |
|
c. Pareto efficient |
3. __C__
This efficiency criterion can only be satisfied when a policy option
makes nobody worse off relative to the status quo. |
|
d. Kaldor-Hicks efficient |
4. __K__
The property rights regime in which the rights of access, withdrawal,
management, and exclusion are held in common by a group of proprietors. |
|
e. Opportunity cost |
5. __I__
This occurs in markets when negative externalities are taxed, or
positive externalities are subsidized. |
|
f. Positive externality |
6. __N__
Occurs when price is below equilibrium in a competitive market, and
quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied. |
|
g. Buy too much |
7. __F__
An external benefit generated from production and exchange and enjoyed
without payment by members of society. |
|
h. Pigouvian tax |
8. __O__
The gains from trade that flow to consumers and producers in
price-mediated market exchange. |
|
i. Externalities are
internalized |
9. __G__ In markets suffering from unresolved
negative externalities, consumers do this as a consequence of paying a
"subsidized" price based on marginal private cost rather than
marginal social cost. |
|
j. Usufructuary rights |
10. __H__
A policy intervention that requires firms to pay marginal external
cost, and thereby causes market supply to be based on marginal social cost
rather than marginal private cost. |
|
k. Common property |
11. __E__
The value of the "next best" alternative that must be given
up when a choice is made in the context of scarcity. |
|
l. Private property |
12. __D__
This efficiency criterion is satisfied when a policy option is
selected that generates the largest gain in net social utility, even if some
are made worse off. |
|
m. Open access |
13. __J__
Certain use and withdrawal rights to property that is owned by
others. |
|
n. Shortage (excess demand) |
14. _M__
The property rights regime in which no entity holds recognized access,
withdrawal, management, exclusion, or alienation rights to a resource. |
|
o. Consumer & producer
surplus |
15. __L__ The property rights regime in which
business firms or individuals hold the rights of access, withdrawal,
management, exclusion, and alienation to a resource, and are recognized as
owners. |
|
p. Consequentialism |
|
|
q. Categorical imperative |
|
|
r. Monopoly |
|
PART
III. Computational analysis. Answer any 2 of the 4 questions below. (15 points
each)
Suppose
that in a well-functioning competitive market, demand is given by the equation
P = 1050 – 0.1Q, and (private-cost) supply is given by the equation P = 50 +
0.2Q, where "P" is price and "Q" is market quantity of some
good or service. Suppose that production of each unit of output Q above leads
to a marginal external cost of $100. If we integrate this marginal external
cost into the market information in question 1 above, the equation for the
social-cost supply curve is given by P = 150 + 0.2Q.
1.
Compute the market equilibrium P and Q using the private-cost supply equation,
which assumes that firms can freely pollute. Show your work.
50 + 0.2Q = 1050 - 0.1Q ==> Q = 3333.33, P = 50 +
0.2(3333.33) = $716.67
2.
Compute the dollar amount of total external cost generated when firms can
freely pollute in the market equilibrium above. Show your work.
MEC * Q = TEC
$100 * 3333.33 = $333,333.33
3.
Compute the market equilibrium P and Q using the social-cost supply equation,
which assumes that a Pigouvian tax is imposed on producers. Show your work.
150 + 0.2Q = 1050 - 0.1Q ==> Q = 3000, P = 150 + 0.2(3000) =
$750
4.
Deadweight social loss occurs in markets with unresolved negative
externalities, but is eliminated by the use of a Pigouvian tax. In this sense
Pigouvian taxes can enhance market efficiency. Compute the dollar amount of
deadweight social loss when firms can freely pollute.
DWL = [MEC *(Qpvt - Qsoc)]/2
DWL = [$100 * (3333.33 - 3000)]/2 = $16,666.67