A) increase law enforcement in public areas.
B) limit access to the commons.
C) increase access to the commons.
D) decrease taxes.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) one person's use diminishes other peoples' use.
B) a person can be prevented from using it.
C) the government rations the quantity of a good that is available.
D) the resource is congestible.
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Multiple Choice
A) $330 if there is 1 ferry trip.
B) $370 if there are 2 ferry trips.
C) $150 if there are 3 ferry trips.
D) All of the above are correct.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) The city council should vote to install the traffic light because the benefits will outweigh the costs.
B) The city council should carefully evaluate the benefits of reduced fatalities against only the explicit costs of the light.
C) The city council should carefully evaluate the benefits of reduced fatalities against the costs of the light and of the extra time that drivers will spend waiting for a green light.
D) The costs will invariably outweigh the benefits.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) private goods
B) club goods
C) common resources
D) public goods
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Multiple Choice
A) Box A and Box B
B) Box A and Box C
C) Box B and Box D
D) Box C and Box D
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) cannot estimate the explicit cost of a project that has not been completed.
B) are unlikely to have access to costs on similar projects.
C) are not able to consider the opportunity cost of resources.
D) will have difficulty estimating the value of the highway.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) 9 person-hours
B) 18 person-hours
C) 39 person-hours
D) 66 person-hours
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) externalities or as a problem of common resources.
B) externalities or as a problem of private goods.
C) the overprovision of public goods or as a problem of the underprovision of private goods.
D) club goods or as a problem that arises when the quantity of excludable goods exceeds the socially-efficient quantity.
Correct Answer
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Essay
Correct Answer
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View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) rival in consumption.
B) nonrival in consumption.
C) excludable.
D) nonexcludable.
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.
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) each individual fisherman has little incentive to maintain the species for the next year.
B) fishermen rely on government managers to worry about fish populations.
C) fishermen are unionized, so they are not concerned with externalities.
D) fishermen have other marketable skills and do not fear exploitation of fish reserves.
Correct Answer
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Short Answer
Correct Answer
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View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) A.
B) B.
C) C.
D) D.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) undervalue knowledge in their pursuit of revenues.
B) overuse their patents.
C) tend to free-ride on the knowledge that others have developed.
D) tend to rely on existing employee knowledge.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) excludable, but nonrival in consumption.
B) not excludable, but rival in consumption.
C) excludable and rival in consumption.
D) not excludable and nonrival in consumption.
Correct Answer
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