Clicker Review. The following table represents a two person game played once by individuals who cannot communicate with each other. Each individual can.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Clicker Quiz. Which of the following is a criterion for evaluating environmental policies? a)efficiency b)fairness c)incentives for improvements d)enforceability.
Advertisements

4 THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities.
How do you lose property rights over something?. Example 5 A county ordinance requires houses to be set back 5 feet from the property line. Joe Potatoes.
Econ 522 Economics of Law Dan Quint Spring 2012 Lecture 5.
Chapter 16 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Set up for today’s class Hand in your paper We will play the Tragedy of the Commons You will write for 15 minutes on how your understanding of Tragedy.
In chapter 10, we look for the answers to these questions:
Chapter Thirty-Three Law and Economics. Effects of Laws u Property right assignments affect –asset, income and wealth distributions; v e.g. nationalized.
Coase Theorem The initial allocation of legal rights and liabilities will not get in the way of the efficient allocation of resources Where parties to.
An Economic Theory of Property
“The Problem of Social Cost” of Ronald Coase William.
Frank & Bernanke 3rd edition, 2007
1 Agenda for 10th Class Coase Theorem Assignment for Next Class –##59-60 –Questions to think about / Writing Assignment Pp. 239ff Qs 1-6.
1 Externalities and Public Goods Chapter Chapter Seventeen Overview 1.Motivation 2.Inefficiency of Competition with Externalities 3.Allocation Property.
Coase Theorem Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize winning economist, born 1910, still living! 1937: “The Nature of the Firm” 1960: “The Problem of Social Cost” Theorem:
 Homework #1 Due Thursday  Group Quiz Next Thursday  Writing Assignment Due Oct. 28th.
4 THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities.
Coase paper “The Problem of Social Cost” Ronald Coase Coase, Ronald H. Journal of Law & Economics, 3: 1 – 44, 1960.
Agrarian Institutions Analysis Session 13 Dr. Michael Sykuta University of Missouri-Columbia Department of Agricultural Economics Director, Contracting.
Externalities Chapter 10 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.
Externalities, Open Access, and Public Goods
Law and Economics-Charles W. Upton Coase on Pigou.
When the market works as it should…
Chapter 11: Coase Theorem Instructor: Dr. Michael A. Newsome
Externalities Negative Externalities; Regulation, Pigovian Taxes, Tradeable Permits.
Chapter 20 Externalities and Public Goods Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior.
Chapter 9 Externalities: When Prices Send the Wrong Signals
Upcoming in Class Group Quiz Thursday Homework #2 Due Next Thursday
© 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc Chapter 18 Asymmetric Information, The Rules of the Game, and Externalities.
Chapter 3 Modeling Market Failure
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Externalities Chapter 10 Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.
Principles of Micro Chapter 10: Externalities by Tanya Molodtsova, Fall 2005.
Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities. Copyright © 2004 South-Western EXTERNALITIES AND MARKET INEFFICIENCY An externality refers to the uncompensated.
Chapter 10 notes Externalities.
EEP 101/Econ 125 lecture 7 Property rights David Zilberman.
A lesson from chapter 7: Competitive markets are “efficient” -- they lead to maximum total surplus. The price rationing mechanism allocates output to.....
Law and Economics-Charles W. Upton The Coase Theorem.
Property Rights Set of rights to engage in specific activities
Chapter 10 Externalities. Objectives 1.) Learn the concepts of external costs and external benefits. 2.) Understand why the presence of externalities.
Modeling Market Failure Chapter 3 © 2004 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
2 TORT Means“Wrong” 3 TORT A violation of a duty imposed by civil law.
1 Coase Theorem-Friedman Eric Rasmusen, G604, lecture 6, February 5, 2003.
Slide 1 Externalities Appendix 16A Externalities: »Externalities exist when benefits or costs fall on others who do not contribute or are reimbursed. »Some.
Econ 522 Economics of Law Dan Quint Fall 2009 Lecture 4.
Externalities, Property Rights, and the Coase Theorem
Copyright © 2004 South-Western Market Failure Recall Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” leads self-interested buyers & sellers in a market to maximize the total.
1 Agenda for 14th Class Sarnoff Assignment for Next Class & Writing Assignment for Group 2 –Ex. 14. Cleaner Skies –2011 exam –Good for everyone to write.
1 Agenda for 14th Class Coase Theorem (continued) Sarnoff Assignment for Next Class Ex. 14. Cleaner Skies Writing Assignments –Cleaner Skies (Groups 1.
Steven Landsburg, University of Rochester Chapter 13 External Costs and Benefits Copyright ©2005 by Thomson South-Western, a part of the Thomson Corporation.
THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Copyright©2004 South-Western Externalities.
Econ 522 Economics of Law Dan Quint Fall 2011 Lecture 6.
6. Absence of Property Rights The Coase Theorem Ronald Coase ( ), Nobel Laureate, Ronald H. Coase: On Economics
PIGOU AND COASE The art of political economy. A.C. PIGOU
Econ 522 Economics of Law Dan Quint Spring 2010 Lecture 5.
Externalities. Maximized total benefit Recall: Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” of the marketplace leads self- interested buyers and sellers in a market.
4 THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities.
THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Maria Cristina Fenoglio
Econ351 Lecture 7. Coase Theorem and property rights
Set up for today’s class
Agenda for 14th Class Handouts Sarnoff Assignment for Next Class
Property Law How are property rights protected?
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
Agenda for 8th Class Admin stuff Handouts Slides Easements Nuisance
Chapter 14 Environmental Economics
Chapter Thirty-Three Law and Economics.
EXTERNALITIES ETP Economics 101.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
Part D-II The Economics of Tort Law
Part D-I The Economics of Tort Law
Presentation transcript:

Clicker Review

The following table represents a two person game played once by individuals who cannot communicate with each other. Each individual can either choose a cooperative or selfish strategy. Which statement best describes the outcome of the game? B cooperateselfish A cooperate10, 104, 8 selfish8, 46, 6 a)The game has no unique solution b)A and B have different dominant strategies c)Both parties will act selfishly d)The game has no Nash equilibrium

The weak version of the Coase theorem states that in the absence of transaction costs a)resources will be put to identical uses independent of the initial assignment of rights. b)wealth effects are independent of the initial assignment of rights. c)parties will be compensated for any harms caused by externalities. d)resources will be allocated efficiently independent of the initial assignment of rights.

A railroad emits sparks which damage the farmer’s crops. The amount of damage depends on the number of trains run. If the railroad is not liable for the farmer’s damages and transaction costs are zero, the railroad will run: Number of Trains Railroad Profits Total damages to farmer’s crops 1$ a)0 trains if the farmer’s profit (before deducting crop damage but allowing for other costs) is $15 b)1 trains c)2 trains d)3 trains e)4 trains f)5 trains

Suppose a factory emits pollutants that injure adjacent homeowners. The law will promote efficiency if it a)creates an incentive for the factory to relocate to a different location if the harm it causes is greater than its profits. b)creates an incentive for homeowners to move to a different location if the cost of moving is less than the harm caused by the pollution. c)holds the factory liable for damages or enjoins it from polluting when the harm it cause is greater than its profits d)holds the factory liable if the homeowners located there first and holds the factory harmless if it located there first

From the standpoint of positive law and economics, one would predict that the principal defense to trespass on land would be a)lack of knowledge that the land was privately owned b)the landowner was not using the property at the time of the trespass and hence there was no harm c)high transaction costs prevented a transaction between the trespasser and the owner d)the benefits from trespassing were greater than the cost imposed on the landowner e)the landowner failed to take reasonable precautions to prevent the trespass

The statement that best describes the difference between protecting entitlements by property rights or by liability rules is: a)the harm is greater from violating an entitlement protected by a property right than one protected by a liability rule. b)both apply to high transaction cost settings but the remedy under a property right is an injunction while the remedy under a liability rule is damages. c)the cost of enforcing a property right exceeds the cost of enforcing a liability rule. d)property rights are good against all trespassers while liability rules apply only to parties unwilling to compensate victims in voluntary transactions. e)a property right approach assumes that a voluntary transaction is economical whereas a liability rule approach assumes that transactions costs prevent a voluntary transaction