Four roommates are planning to spend the weekend in their dorm room watching old movies, and they are debating how many to watch. Here is the willingness to pay for each film. Dwayne Javier Salman...


Four roommates are planning to spend the weekend in their dorm room watching old movies, and they are debating how many to watch. Here is the willingness to pay for each film.


















































Dwayne



Javier



Salman



Chris



First Film



$7



$5



$3



$2



Second Film



6



4



2



1



Third Film



5



3



1



0



Fourth Film



4



2



0



0



Fifth Film



3



1



0



0





  1. Within the dorm room, is the showing of a movie a public good? Why or why not?

  2. If it costs $8 to stream a movie, how many movies should the roommates stream to maximize total surplus?

  3. If they choose the optimal number from part (b) and then split the cost of streaming the movies equally, how much surplus does each person obtain from watching the movies?

  4. Is there any way to split the cost to ensure that everyone benefits? What practical problems does this solution raise?

  5. Suppose they agree in advance to choose the optimal number of movies and split the cost equally. When Dwayne is asked his willingness to pay, will he have an incentive to tell the truth? If so, why? If not, what will he be tempted to say?

  6. What does this example teach you about the optimal provision of public goods?



Jun 08, 2022
SOLUTION.PDF

Get Answer To This Question

Related Questions & Answers

More Questions »

Submit New Assignment

Copy and Paste Your Assignment Here