Positive externalities can be internalized using persuasion, but persuasion is not effective with negative externalities.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
False
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Referring to a production possibilities curve and the goods being compared, depict the economic event. Suppose the United States was at full employment in 2003 just before invading Iraq. Although the war was won quickly, winning the peace took a decade (guns vs. butter).
A. A movement from a point on or near the curve to a point inside the curve B. A shift in the entire curve to the right (outward) C. A shift in the entire curve to the left (inward) D. A movement along the curve
Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)
1. A non-congested toll road is an example of a good that is excludable, but not rivalrous in consumption. 2. Public goods can frequently be provided by private action when the resulting benefits are widespread. 3. All economists agree that a public good is one the is nonrivalrous and nonexcludable. 4. When a public goods increases the desirability of living in a certain area, benefits tend to be captured entirely by an increase in land values. 5. In a Clarke tax scheme, the amount of tax that a person pays depends, in part, on his revealed preference for the public good.
In an inflationary expenditure gap, the equilibrium level of real GDP is
A. equal to full-employment real GDP. B. greater than full-employment real GDP. C. greater than planned investment. D. less than full-employment real GDP.
Which of the following shifts the short-run aggregate supply curve?
I. changes in the size of the labor force II. changes in the money wage rate A) I only B) II only C) both I and II D) neither I nor II