Eco 450 Wk 4 Quiz 3 Ch. 4 & 5 - All Possible Questions

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ECO 450 WK 4 Quiz 3 Ch. 4 & 5 - All Possible Questions

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ECO 450 WK 4 Quiz 3 Ch. 4 & 5 - All Possible Questions

 

True/False Questions

  1.   Bread is an example of a good that is nonrival in consumption. 

  2.   A pure public good is one for which it is easy to exclude consumers from benefits if they refuse to pay. 

  3.   The marginal social cost of producing another unit of a pure public good will always be positive. 

  4.   To obtain a demand curve for a pure public good, the marginal benefit of each consumer must be summed for each possible quantity produced per time period. 

  5.   If the efficient amount of a pure public good is produced, each person consumes it up to the point at which his or her marginal benefit equals the marginal social cost of the good. 

  6.   In a Lindahl equilibrium, each consumer of a pure public good consumes the same quantity and pays a tax share per unit of the good equal to his or her marginal benefit. 

  7.   If the marginal social cost of a pure public good exceeds its marginal social benefit, additional units of the good can still be financed by voluntary contributions. 

  8.   The free-rider problem is less acute in small groups than it is in large groups. 

  9.   A congestible public good is one for which the marginal cost of allowing an additional consumer to enjoy the benefits of a given quantity is always zero. 

10.   Television programming is a good example of a price-excludable public good. 

11.   It is possible to price a pure public good and sell it by the unit. 

12.   The demand curve for a pure public good is obtained by adding the quantities demanded by each individual consumer at each possible price. 

13.   A Lindahl equilibrium usually has each participant paying the same tax share per unit of a public good even though their marginal benefit of that unit varies. 

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