Briefly and concisely define the following concepts and terms.
a. marginal social cost
b. detrimental externalities
c. free-rider problem
d. cost disease
e. “defective telescopic faculty”
a. Marginal social cost is the sum of marginal private cost, the portion of marginal cost caused by an activity that is paid for by the persons who carry out the activity, and incidental cost, which is the portion of marginal cost borne by others.b. Detrimental externalities are incidental damages to others not compensated by those who generate the externalities. Examples include noise, air, and water pollution.c. Free riders are nonpaying users who cannot be excluded from enjoying a public good. The good would have to be provided by government or nonprofit institutions since private enterprise would not provide a good for which users would not pay.d. The cost disease is the increase in cost of services such as education, health care, and police protection because they are not amenable to labor-saving innovations.e. A defective telescopic faculty is the term used by British economist A. C. Pigou to refer to individuals who are too shortsighted to give adequate weight to the future. When applied to the trade-off between current consumption and investment for the future, it implies too little tends to be invested for the future.
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Society can produce at a point outside the production possibilities frontier, but only if it is using all of its resources efficiently.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
Tax creates a deadweight loss
What will be an ideal response?
Oligopoly differs from monopoly as follows:
A. Oligopoly involves a few firms; monopoly involves a single firm and oligopoly involves free entry; monopoly involves no free entry. B. Oligopoly involves free entry; monopoly involves no free entry. C. Oligopoly does use advertisement; monopoly does not use advertisement. D. Oligopoly involves a few firms; monopoly involves a single firm.
Scarcity and shortages differ in that
A. scarcity is caused by natural disasters and shortages are caused by mistakes people make. B. scarcity is a condition of human life while shortages are usually temporary phenomena related to an imbalance between the amount desired and the amount produced. C. shortages apply to resource markets while scarcity applies to product markets. D. scarcity is a type of shortage but shortage is a broader concept.