Question

In: Economics

Macroeconomics Chapter 7 Homework

The town of Cleanville lies next to a lake, which the residents of the town use for fishing, boating, and other recreational activities. Last year, two firms, Filth Inc. and Sludge Inc., built factories on the other side of the lake and have been dumping trash into it. Although some of the trash will dissipate naturally, the amount of trash the two firms emit is too much for the lake to handle. Right now, each firm dumps 40 pounds of trash in the lake each year (total of 80 pounds). Environmental scientists in Cleanville estimate that the lake can handle only 30 pounds of trash per year. The table below reports the marginal costs to the two firms of reducing trash.
 

Pounds reducedFilth Inc.’s marginal costs
(in $1,000s)
Sludge Inc.’s marginal costs
(in $1,000s)
527
10410
15613
20816
251019
301222
351425
401628


The marginal cost numbers tell us how much it would cost to reduce the marginal five pounds of trash. Therefore, Filth Inc.'s marginal cost of reducing the first 5 pounds is $2,000 and the next 5 pounds $4,000. Therefore, the total cost to reduce 10 pounds is $6,000.

Suppose the city council agrees with the scientists' estimates and orders each firm to reduce trash by 25 pounds. The total cost to reduce this amount of trash is $   .

 

Part 2

Suppose that after taking your economics course you visit Cleanville and hear about the city council's solution to reducing the trash. You think to yourself, “Haven’t these people learned some basic economics and the Coase theorem?" You gather some data, crunch some numbers, and go to the next city council meeting. You tell them that they should give each firm three permits. Each permit allows the firm to emit 5 pounds per year. Each firm can therefore emit 15 pounds per year, which means they would have to reduce the amount of trash they emit by 25 pounds.

One of the council members raises his hand and asks, "But that's what our proposal does. How is yours any different?"
You answer, "What makes my proposal different is that we allow the firms to buy or sell these permits." The city council is amazed at your insight and comments how much you learned in your econ class. They realize that after your proposal has been put into place, the total cost of getting rid of the 50 pounds of trash will fall to $   , the lowest total cost possible.

Part 3

Let’s see how the drop in total costs will come about. Filth Inc. and Sludge Inc. each start with three permits. If a firm does not buy a permit or sell one of its permits, it would need to reduce trash by 25 pounds. If it sells a permit, it would have to get rid of more trash, and if it buys a permit, it would have to get rid of less.
 

Pounds reducedFilth Inc.’s marginal costs
(in $1,000s)
Sludge Inc.’s marginal costs
(in $1,000s)
527
10410
15613
20816
251019
301222
351425
401628


Hector Sludge, the owner of Sludge Inc., calls Jordan Filth and tells her he has an offer she can't refuse (a little trash humor): "I will buy one of your permits for $14,000."

Solutions

Expert Solution

The town of Cleanville lies next to a lake, which the residents of the town use for fishing, boating, and other recreational activities. Last year, two firms, Filth Inc. and Sludge Inc., built factories on the other side of the lake and have been dumping trash into it. Although some of the trash will dissipate naturally, the amount of trash the two firms emit is too much for the lake to handle. Right now, each firm dumps 40 pounds of trash in the lake each year (total of 80 pounds). Environmental scientists in Cleanville estimate that the lake can handle only 30 pounds of trash per year. The table below reports the marginal costs to the two firms of reducing trash.
 

Pounds reducedFilth Inc.’s marginal costs
(in $1,000s)
Sludge Inc.’s marginal costs
(in $1,000s)
527
10410
15613
20816
251019
301222
351425
401628


The marginal cost numbers tell us how much it would cost to reduce the marginal five pounds of trash. Therefore, Filth Inc.'s marginal cost of reducing the first 5 pounds is $2,000 and the next 5 pounds $4,000. Therefore, the total cost to reduce 10 pounds is $6,000.

Suppose the city council agrees with the scientists' estimates and orders each firm to reduce trash by 25 pounds. The total cost to reduce this amount of trash is $   .

 

Part 2

Suppose that after taking your economics course you visit Cleanville and hear about the city council's solution to reducing the trash. You think to yourself, “Haven’t these people learned some basic economics and the Coase theorem?" You gather some data, crunch some numbers, and go to the next city council meeting. You tell them that they should give each firm three permits. Each permit allows the firm to emit 5 pounds per year. Each firm can therefore emit 15 pounds per year, which means they would have to reduce the amount of trash they emit by 25 pounds.

One of the council members raises his hand and asks, "But that's what our proposal does. How is yours any different?"
You answer, "What makes my proposal different is that we allow the firms to buy or sell these permits." The city council is amazed at your insight and comments how much you learned in your econ class. They realize that after your proposal has been put into place, the total cost of getting rid of the 50 pounds of trash will fall to $   , the lowest total cost possible.

Part 3

Let’s see how the drop in total costs will come about. Filth Inc. and Sludge Inc. each start with three permits. If a firm does not buy a permit or sell one of its permits, it would need to reduce trash by 25 pounds. If it sells a permit, it would have to get rid of more trash, and if it buys a permit, it would have to get rid of less.
 

Pounds reducedFilth Inc.’s marginal costs
(in $1,000s)
Sludge Inc.’s marginal costs
(in $1,000s)
527
10410
15613
20816
251019
301222
351425
401628


Hector Sludge, the owner of Sludge Inc., calls Jordan Filth and tells her he has an offer she can't refuse (a little trash humor): "I will buy one of your permits for $14,000."

 




Related Solutions

CHAPTER 7: SERVICE LINE COSTING AND PRICING Homework 3.1, Chapter 7 a. Your hospital is considering...
CHAPTER 7: SERVICE LINE COSTING AND PRICING Homework 3.1, Chapter 7 a. Your hospital is considering offering a new outpatient service. Using the data below, determine the price needed to breakeven. RELEVANT DATA: Variable cost per visit $8 Annual direct fixed costs $650,000 Annual overhead allocation $70,000 Expected utilization (visits) 10,000 b. Assume now that the CEO is requesting to know what price must be set in order to earn a $100,000 profit. What price must be set in order...
Homework 7 over Chapter 12 1. For the previous month, the Bichsel Lounge served 1,500 customers...
Homework 7 over Chapter 12 1. For the previous month, the Bichsel Lounge served 1,500 customers with very few complaints. Their labor cost was $3,000; material cost was $800; energy cost was $200; and building lease cost was $1,500. They were open 26 days during the month, and the lounge has 20 seats. They are open six hours per day, and the average customer stay is one hour. a. Calculate the single-factor productivities and the overall multiple-factor productivity. How could...
Chapter 7 Homework Assignment (part 1) Hide or show questions Progress:7/8 items eBook Show Me How...
Chapter 7 Homework Assignment (part 1) Hide or show questions Progress:7/8 items eBook Show Me How Calculator Print Item Weighted Average Cost Flow Method Under Perpetual Inventory System The following units of a particular item were available for sale during the calendar year: Jan. 1 Inventory 30,000 units at $30.00 Mar. 18 Sale 24,000 units May 2 Purchase 54,000 units at $31.00 Aug. 9 Sale 45,000 units Oct. 20 Purchase 21,000 units at $32.10 The firm uses the weighted average...
Chapter 7 Homework: 1. On March 15, 2017, Birkshire Energy obtained a nine-month working capital loan...
Chapter 7 Homework: 1. On March 15, 2017, Birkshire Energy obtained a nine-month working capital loan from the First National Bank of Oglesby. The face amount of the note signed by the treasurer was $900,000. The interest rate charged by the bank was 10 percent. The bank made the loan on a discount basis. (Round your final answers to the nearest dollar). (a.) Calculate the loan proceeds made available to Birkshire. (b.) Calculate the amount of interest expense related to...
If economics is defined upon the presence of "scarcity," as asserted in chapter one of Macroeconomics...
If economics is defined upon the presence of "scarcity," as asserted in chapter one of Macroeconomics by McConnell, Campbell, then how is economic growth possible?
This week's homework is based on the reading for chapter 12 and deals with Medicare fees...
This week's homework is based on the reading for chapter 12 and deals with Medicare fees and limiting charges. This case study is due by end of day Friday. Fill out the information below and determine the amount owed by the patient after the deductible has been met in the following situations. Provide the calculations used to determine your answers: A. Participating physician’s standard fee: $300.00 Allowed amount $200.00 Medicare pays 80% Patient or supplemental plan pays 20%: Provider adjustment...
summarize chapter 2. THE MARKET SYSTEM AND THE CIRCULAR FLOW. BY MCCONNELL BRUE FLYNN. MACROECONOMICS
summarize chapter 2. THE MARKET SYSTEM AND THE CIRCULAR FLOW. BY MCCONNELL BRUE FLYNN. MACROECONOMICS
Provide examples of companies that filed for Chapter 7 and Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Provide examples of companies that filed for Chapter 7 and Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Chapter 7: Inventory Additionally, please refer to Chapter 7 in your Cengage Accounting eText, accessible from...
Chapter 7: Inventory Additionally, please refer to Chapter 7 in your Cengage Accounting eText, accessible from the eText link in the Course Navigation Panel to the left of your screen. Requirement 1: The inventory at the end of the year was understated by $14,750. (a) Did the error cause an overstatement or an understatement of the gross profit for the year? (b) Which items on the balance sheet at the end of the year were overstated or understated as a...
After reading Chapter 2 of Principles of Macroeconomics, please provide at least one example of each...
After reading Chapter 2 of Principles of Macroeconomics, please provide at least one example of each type of economic resource (land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship). Furthermore, be prepared to provide examples of how the five parameters (incentives, trade-offs, exchange, information, distribution) link scarcity and choice for the resource examples that you provide
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT