Chapter 12: Problem 28
What does a point inside the production possibility frontier represent?
Chapter 12: Problem 28
What does a point inside the production possibility frontier represent?
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Get started for freeGive an example of a positive externality and an example of a negative externality.
What is an externality?
Consider the case of global environmental problems that spill across international borders as a prisoner's dilemma of the sort studied in Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly. Say that there are two countries, A and B. Each country can choose whether to protect the environment, at a cost of \(10,\) or not to protect it, at a cost of zero. If one country decides to protect the environment, there is a benefit of \(16,\) but the benefit is divided equally between the two countries. If both countries decide to protect the environment, there is a benefit of \(32,\) which is divided equally between the two countries. a. In Table 12.10 , fill in the costs, benefits, and total payoffs to the countries of the following decisions. Explain why, without some international agreement, they are likely to end up with neither country acting to protect the environment.
Is zero pollution possible under a marketable permits system? Why or why not?
Will a system of marketable permits work with thousands of firms? Why or why not?
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