Environmental economics 1 ECN 445 SPRING 2018 PROBLEM SET 2 [Lectures: Welfare evaluation] 1(a) If the government imposes a tax on cupcakes, raising their price by 20%, what is the measure of the...


Environmental economics


1




ECN 445 SPRING 2018



PROBLEM SET 2




[Lectures: Welfare evaluation]



1(a) If the government imposes a tax on cupcakes, raising

their price by 20%, what is the




measure of the economic loss suffered by consumers who buy

cupcakes? Operationally, how



would you measure the amount of this loss? Might firms that

make cupcakes suffer a loss, too?




What is the measure of their loss? (b) Draw the appropriate

diagram that depicts these losses



qualitatively




2 (a) What is the indirect function? What does it show? (b)

A consumer has an indirect utility



function 06 04 1 28 u y p p ? ?? His income is y=$3000;

the price of good 1 changes from p1 = $4 to




p1 = $2, while p2 = $3 Is the consumer better off as a

result of this price change, worse off, or



equally well off as before? Explain the reason for your

answer




(c) The maximum amount that the consumer would have been

willing to pay for this price



reduction is given by the compensating variation measure

Write down the algebraic equation




which defines the compensating variation in this case



(d) Now solve that equation – calculate the numerical value

of the WTP for the price reduction in




this case



(e) The minimum amount of compensation that the consumer

would have wanted to forego the




price decrease is given by the equivalent variation – this

is the WTA value of the price reduction



Write down the algebraic equation which defines the WTA

value in this case (you don’t need to




solve the equation)



(f) If you solved the equation in (e) – you are not asked to

solve it – do you expect that the WTA




value would turn out to be the same as the WTP value in part

(d), larger, or smaller? Explain



your reason




[Lecture: Demand and Welfare When Attributes Matter]



3 In this community in Yugoslavia there are two

commodities; x1 is consumed especially by




families with children and also, to a lesser extent, by

families without children x2 appeals the



same to families with and without children All families

have the same utility function, which is




given by



2




U(x1,x2) = 03ln(x1 – C 075) + 07 ln x2



where C is the number of children in the family This is an

example of what is known as a Stone-




Geary utility function



(a) Explain how having more children (ie, a higher value

of C) changes a family’s




preferences for x1 Does this effect scale linearly with the

number of children?



The corresponding indirect utility function is given by 075




1



030 07




1 2



y p C u




p p



? ?




(b) Suppose there are two types of families in this

community: families with no children and



families with 4 children This is an egalitarian country and

all families have the same income,




$25,000 Prices are p1 = $4 and p2 = $10 The national

government introduces a type of child



support payment program It wants to give an income

supplement to families with children so as




to make them as well as off as other families with the same

income but no children How much



should it give per child? [HINT: Use the indirect utility

function to set up something like the




equation for WTA]



4 A study of people’s choice of transportation mode for

commuting to work develops the




following empirical estimate of the indirect utility

function for using a given mode of



transportation: u = 20 – 4 T – 12C




where u is the utility associated with travelling by that

mode, T is the total time required for the



trip, in minutes, and C is the total cost of the trip in

dollars




(a) Suppose that a particular consumer who has this indirect

utility function faces a choice



between two alternative travel modes: taking the bus to work

takes 60 minutes and costs $1;




driving to work takes 40 minutes but (with gas and tolls)

costs $10 Which mode will that person



choose? Explain the reasoning underlying your answer




(b) What is the value of travel time for this consumer (the

rate at which he would be willing to



trade-off an extra minute of travel time for a reduced

travel cost)?




(c) Suppose this indirect utility function represents the

preferences of all commuters in the area



The city is considering a proposal to install a new

light-rail transit system, similar in appearance




to the existing bus transportation but with more capacity

It estimates that, overall, the new light-



right would save 3 billion minutes of commuting time per

year The cost to construct the system,




when put on an annual basis, would amount to $12 billion

Should the city go ahead and build



the light-rail system? Explain your reason




For the next question, lecture 2-22 Travel Cost



3




5 The table below gives information on the distance from

various nearby towns to the famous



Cupcake Town Lake (distance is in miles) There is no

admission fee The only cost of visiting




Cupcake Lake is the travel cost, which costs $1/mile The

researcher estimates the relationship



between the number of visits per capita (per person), x, and

the one-way travel cost from the




town in which people live, p He finds this demand function

to be: x = 5 – 02*p



(a) What is the cutoff price (the price at which demand

falls to zero) with this demand function?




(b) Add columns to the table above identifying the cost of a

visit to Cupcake Lake from each



town, the predicted number of visits per capita from that

town, and the total number of visits




from the town (ie, the visits per capita multiplied by the

population)



(c) Why doesn’t the researcher observe anyone coming from

Delight to Cupcake Lake?




(d) Because of management costs, park managers are

considering charging for admission to



Cupcake Lake They are considering an admission charge of

$10/visit Figure out (i) the new




cost of visiting Cupcake from each town, (ii) the new number

of visits per capita from each



town, and (iii) the new total number of visits from each

town (remember that negative visits




count as zero)



(e) Suppose the authorities make improvements at Cupcake

Lake (they build a boathouse), which




only residents of Alabaster are allowed to use In

consequence, Alabaster resident’s demand



function for Cupcake lake changes to x = 8 – 02p The

demand functions of residents of the other




towns do not change What is the value of this improvement

to Alabaster residents?



(f) Assume there is a $5 admission charge at Cupcake Lake

The County authorities are planning




to open a new park at South Bend South Bend is located 12

miles from Alabaster, 18 miles from



Beautiful, 12 miles from Cornucopia, and 40 miles from

Delight For now, there will be no




admission charge at South Bend Park Which people will

benefit from the opening of South



Bend? How many visits will it attract annually? What is the

aggregate gain in consumer’s




surplus associated with the opening of South Bend Park?



[Lecture on Firm Profit Maximization]




4



6 All-Leather is a tanning company in Chicago Its total

cost function is




C(QA) = 25 + 10QA + 4QA 2, where QA is leather production

per week in thousands of pounds



a) What is the formula for All-Leather’s marginal cost

function?




b) If leather sells for $1190 per thousand pounds, how much

leather will All-Leather produce?



c) How much profit will All-Leather make?




[Based on BH pp 201-215; see also Lecture:Industry

equilibrium and supply]



7 Slovak-Steel is the only steel factory in Slovakia It

burns coal in to produce steel But, it is




now required to abate the emissions from its use of coal



(a) Suppose this emissions reduction raises (i) only

Slovak-Steel’s fixed costs of production, or




(ii) only Slovak-Steel’s variable costs of production, or

(iii) both Slovak-Steel’s fixed and



variable costs of production In each case, using both words

and the appropriate diagrams,




explain how emission reduction affects Slovak’s supply curve

of steel



(b) The Slovakian steel industry grows over time as the

economy expands, the demand for steel




increases, and new firms have entered the steel industry in

Slovakia Pollution control



regulations also change over time, and become more

stringent In its planning for a new round of




tighter air pollution control regulations on its steel

industry, the Slovakian government is



considering grandfathering Slovak-Steel How would grandfathering

affect (i) Slovak-Steel, and




(ii) firms that are thinking of entering the steel industry?

How would grandfathering affect



consumers of steel?




Lecture Market allocation and welfare



8 (a) Suppose two different individuals finds themselves on

a deserted island in the Pacific




Without knowing anything about the island, one person

occupies the west end of the island, and



the other occupies the east end It subsequently turns out

that there are certain stocks of fruits and




vegetables lying around each end of the island Is this a

Pareto efficient allocation of those



resources among the two individuals? Explain your reasoning

(b) Suppose that, having become




aware of the fruits and vegetables on the island, the two

individuals get together and exchange



certain amounts of the fruits and vegetables among

themselves; is that a Pareto efficient




allocation of those resources? Explain your reasoning


May 16, 2022
SOLUTION.PDF

Get Answer To This Question

Related Questions & Answers

More Questions »

Submit New Assignment

Copy and Paste Your Assignment Here