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PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS (OER)
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9781947172340
Author: Timothy Taylor, Steven A. Greenlaw
Publisher: OpenStax
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Textbook Question
Chapter 12, Problem 32CTQ
Will a system of marketable permits work with thousands of films? Why or why not?
Expert Solution & Answer
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Students have asked these similar questions
1) Use the supply and demand schedules to graph the supply and demand functions.
Find and show on the graph the equilibrium price and quantity, label it (A).
P
Q demanded
P
Q supplied
0
75
0
0
5
65
5
0
10
55
10
0
15
45
15
10
20
35
20
20
25
25
25
30
30
15
30
40
35
40
5
0
35
40
50
60
2) Find graphically and numerically the consumers and producers' surplus
3) The government introduced a tax of 10$, Label the price buyers pay and suppliers
receive. Label the new equilibrium for buyers (B) and Sellers (S). How the surpluses
have changed? Give the numerical answer and show on the graph.
4) Calculate using midpoint method the elasticity of demand curve from point (A) to (B)
and elasticity of the supply curve from point (A) to (C).
Four heirs (A, B, C, and D) must divide fairly an estate consisting of three items — a house, a cabin and a boat — using the method of sealed bids. The players' bids (in dollars) are:
In the initial allocation, player D
Group of answer choices
gets no items and gets $62,500 from the estate.
gets the house and pays the estate $122,500.
gets the cabin and gets $7,500 from the estate.
gets the boat and and gets $55,500 from the estate.
none of these
Jack and Jill are getting a divorce. Except for the house, they own very little of value so they agree to divide the house fairly using the method of sealed bids. Jack bids 140,000 and Jill bids 160,000. After all is said and done, the final outcome is
Group of answer choices
Jill gets the house and pays Jack $80,000.
Jill gets the house and pays Jack $75,000.
Jill gets the house and pays Jack $70,000.
Jill gets the house and pays Jack $65,000.
none of these
Chapter 12 Solutions
PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS (OER)
Ch. 12 - Identify the following situations as an example of...Ch. 12 - Identify whether the market supply curve will...Ch. 12 - For each of your answers to Exercise 12.2, will...Ch. 12 - Table 12.5 provides the supply and demand...Ch. 12 - Consider two approaches to reducing emissions of...Ch. 12 - Classify the following pollution-control policies...Ch. 12 - An emissions tax on a quantity of emissions from a...Ch. 12 - Four films called Elm, Maple, Oak, and (Shelly,...Ch. 12 - The rows in Table 12.7 show three market-oriented...Ch. 12 - Suppose a city releases 16 million gallons of raw...
Ch. 12 - The state of Colorado requires oil and gas...Ch. 12 - Consider the case of global environmental problems...Ch. 12 - A country called Sherwood is very heavily covered...Ch. 12 - What is an externality?Ch. 12 - Give an example of a positive externality and an...Ch. 12 - What is the difference between private costs and...Ch. 12 - In a market without environmental regulations,...Ch. 12 - What is command-and-control environmental...Ch. 12 - What are the three problems that economists have...Ch. 12 - What is a pollution charge and what incentive does...Ch. 12 - What is a marketable permit and what incentive...Ch. 12 - What are better-defined property rights and what...Ch. 12 - As the extent of environmental protection expands,...Ch. 12 - As the extent of environmental protection expands,...Ch. 12 - What are the economic tradeoffs between low-income...Ch. 12 - What arguments d0 low-income countries make in...Ch. 12 - In the tradeoff between economic output and...Ch. 12 - What does a point inside the production...Ch. 12 - Suppose you want to put a dollar value on the...Ch. 12 - Would environmentalists favor command-and-control...Ch. 12 - Consider two ways of protecting elephants from...Ch. 12 - Will a system of marketable permits work with...Ch. 12 - Is zero pollution possible under a marketable...Ch. 12 - Is zero pollution an optimal goal? Way or why not?Ch. 12 - From an economic perspective, is it sound policy...Ch. 12 - Recycling is a relatively inexpensive solution to...Ch. 12 - Can extreme levels of pollution hurt the economic...Ch. 12 - How can high-income countries benefit from...Ch. 12 - Technological innovations shift the production...Ch. 12 - Show the market for cigarettes in equilibrium,...Ch. 12 - Refer to Table 12.2. The externality created by...Ch. 12 - Table 12.12, shows the supply and demand...Ch. 12 - A city currently emits 15 million gallons (MG) of...Ch. 12 - In the Land of Purity, there is only one form of...
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