Chapter 11: Problem 14
What is an externality?
/*! This file is auto-generated */ .wp-block-button__link{color:#fff;background-color:#32373c;border-radius:9999px;box-shadow:none;text-decoration:none;padding:calc(.667em + 2px) calc(1.333em + 2px);font-size:1.125em}.wp-block-file__button{background:#32373c;color:#fff;text-decoration:none}
Learning Materials
Features
Discover
Chapter 11: Problem 14
What is an externality?
All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.
Get started for free
Consider two approaches to reducing emissions of \(\mathrm{CO}_{2}\) into the environment from manufacturing industries in the United States. In the first approach, the U.S. government makes it a policy to use only predetermined technologies. In the second approach, the U.S. government determines which technologies are cleaner and subsidizes their use. Of the two approaches, which is the command-and-control policy?
Show the market for cigarettes in equilibrium, assuming that there are no laws banning smoking in public. Label the equilibrium private market price and quantity as \(\mathrm{Pm}\) and \(\mathrm{Qm}\). Add whatever is needed to the model to show the impact of the negative externality from second-hand smoking. (Hint: In this case it is the consumers, not the sellers, who are creating the negative externality.) Label the social optimal output and price as Pe and Qe. On the graph, shade in the deadweight loss at the market output.
What is command-and-control environmental regulation?
What is a pollution charge and what incentive does it provide for a firm to take external costs into account?
An emissions tax on a quantity of emissions from a firm is not a command-and- control approach to reducing pollution. Why?
What do you think about this solution?
We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.