Exam Prep Ch8 Benefit-Cost Analysis Costs - Environmental Economics 8th Edition Test Bank by Barry Field. DOCX document preview.

Exam Prep Ch8 Benefit-Cost Analysis Costs

Chapter 08

Benefit-Cost Analysis: Costs

 


Multiple Choice Questions
 

1. Illegal roadside dumping resulting from the introduction of waste disposal charges is one example of the ________ of an environmental policy. 
A. pollution control cost
B. enforcement cost
C. unintended consequences
D. before/after result

 Difficulty: Easy



 
2. Resources devoted to monitoring the behavior of firms, agencies, and individuals subject to environmental regulations are called ________. 
A. abatement costs
B. enforcement costs
C. private costs
D. environmental costs

 
Difficulty: Easy

 

Table 8.1

Production costs before the regulation

$ 200

Production costs in the future, without the regulation

$ 250

Production costs in the future, with the regulation

$ 290

 

3. Refer to Table 8.1. If the with/without principle were applied to estimate the change in cost due to a new environmental regulation, the added costs due to the new regulation would be ________. 
A. $90
B. $40
C. $50
D. $290


Difficulty: Easy

4. Refer to Table 8.1. If the before/after principle were applied to estimate the change in cost due to a new environmental regulation, the added costs due to the new regulation would be ________. 
A. $90
B. $40
C. $50
D. $290


Difficulty: Easy


5. Suppose a manufacturing firm that is about to be regulated faces the following actual and potential production costs: 1) $4,000 before regulation; 2) $4,550 in the future without the regulation; and 3) $5,200 in the future with the regulation. The true cost of the proposed regulation, invoking the with/without principle, is ________. 
A. $550
B. $1,200
C. $650
D. impossible to determine from the information provided

 
Difficulty: Easy.
 

6. Suppose a manufacturing firm that is about to be regulated faces the following actual and potential production costs: 1) $2,500 before regulation; 2) $2,925 in the future without the regulation; and 3) $3,240 in the future with the regulation. The before/after cost of the regulation is ________ and the with/without cost of the regulation is ________. 
A. $425; $740
B. $425; $315
C. $740; $315
D. $315; $425

 
Difficulty: Easy.
 

7. A city is evaluating a proposal to build a recycling depot. If a generous citizen is willing to donate land for the project with a current market value of $800,000, the ________ of the land is ________. 
A. social opportunity cost; $0
B. social opportunity cost; unknown
C. private cost to the city; $800,000
D. social opportunity cost; $800,000


Difficulty: Moderate
 

8. Social costs are equal to
A. private welfare – social welfare.
B. private costs + social welfare.
C. private costs – external costs.
D. private costs + external costs.

Difficulty: Moderate

9. An example of a cost to a private group that is not a cost from the standpoint of society is ___________.
A. the cost of inputs
B. a tax
C. pollution
D. opportunity cost


Difficulty: Moderate


10. Another term for pollution taxes is ___________. These are payments from one group, the polluters, to another group, the administering agency or beneficiary of the tax. 
A. transfer payments
B. opportunity costs
C. external costs
D. enforcement costs


Difficulty: Moderate

11. Environmental protection and control programs can also have adverse environmental effects and additional costs. Some of these effects and costs include 
A. media switching.
B. unforeseen impacts as consumers and firms adjust to new programs.
C. mitigating programs meant to reduce or avoid additional environmental impacts.
D. all of the above.


Difficulty: Easy

12. Enforcement costs for new protective programs include 
A. resources devoted to monitoring the behavior of firms.
B. relaxed enforcement on other regulations.
C. both A and B. are types of enforcement costs.
D. neither A nor B. are an example of enforcement costs.


Difficulty: Easy

13. Cost of environmental quality programs can be estimated at a variety of different levels. Perhaps the most straightforward level would be 
A. costs of single facilities.
B. costs of a local regulation.
C. costs of regulating an industry.
D. costs at the national level.

Difficulty: Easy

14. When examining the costs associated with a local regulation, the affected local community believes the local social costs are high and
A. the broader social opportunity costs are high.
B. the broader social opportunity costs are low.
C. industry production is often reduced.
D. industry employment rates are often impacted.


Difficulty: Easy

15. When providing costs associated with industry regulations that allow firms latitude in their response, the analysis must first begin with
A. identification of alternatives that firms might pursue.
B. the impact that the regulation has on production.
C. the impact that the regulation has on employment.
D. the impact that the regulation might have on product prices.


Difficulty: Easy

16. Cost data gathered to construct a representative firm 
A. is collected by surveying current firms in the industry.
B. can be misrepresentative when the industry is comprised of heterogeneous firms.
C. is typically more accurate for historical costs than future costs under new regulations.
D. all of the above.


Difficulty: Easy

17. Cost data surveys includes questions related to

A. number of employees.

B. processes used.

C. costs of energy.

D. all of the above.

Difficulty: Easy

18. When evaluating proposals for building a new municipal sewage treatment plant, a benefit-cost analysis

A. does not have to include the cost of the land if it is donated.
B. must include the value of the land even if it is donated.
C. may or may not include the cost of the land if it is donated, depending on whether the donor is a private or public entity.
D. benefit-cost studies are not appropriate for municipal projects.


Difficulty: Easy

19. A region is considering two sites on which to locate a new wastewater treatment plant.
Site A has been owned by the region for five years and the region initially paid $200,000 for the land. The current market value of Site A is $400,000. Site B is land the region would have to purchase for $300,000. What is the social opportunity cost of each site?

A. $200,000 for Site A; $300,000 for Site B
B. $300,000 for Site A; $300,000 for Site B
C. $400,000 for Site A; $300,000 for Site B
D. The social opportunity cost should be state for the project, not each site and would be equal to the lowest value for either site, $200,000.


Difficulty: Moderate

20. Refer to the Figure above. Panel (a) represents an industry that has experienced cost increases due to environmental regulations. The price per unit increase that the industry experiences, from p1 to p2

A. is equal to the cost per unit increase, from c1 to c2.
B. is less than the cost per unit increase, from c1 to c2.
C. is greater than the cost per unit increase, from c1 to c2.
D. cannot be accurately stated from the picture.


Difficulty: Easy

21. Refer to the Figure above. Panel (b) represents an industry that has experienced cost increases due to environmental regulations. The price per unit increase that the industry experiences, from p1 to p2

A. is equal to the cost per unit increase, from c1 to c2.
B. is less than the cost per unit increase, from c1 to c2.
C. is greater than the cost per unit increase, from c1 to c2.
D. cannot be accurately stated from the picture.


Difficulty: Easy

22. Refer to the Figure above. Panel (a) and Panel (b) represent industries that have experienced cost increases due to environmental regulations. Assume that both price increases are equivalent. Which panel reflects less impact on the consumer and a large industry adjustment, in terms of less output?

A. Panel (a) reflects a larger industry adjustment.
B. Panel (b) reflects a larger industry adjustment.
C. Panel (a) and Panel (b) reflect the same industry impact.
D. The graphs do not indicate which industry is affected more by the regulations.


Difficulty: Moderate

23. Refer to the Figure above. In Panel (a), the increase in total cost of producing the original quantity of output at the new cost associated with increased environmental regulations would be

A. p2 x q1.
B. (a + b + c).
C. p2 x q2.
D. p1 x q1.

Difficulty: Moderate

24. Refer to the Figure above. In Panel (b), the increase in total cost of producing the original quantity of output at the new cost associated with increased environmental regulations would be

A. p2 x r1.
B. (d + e + f).
C. p2 x r2.
D. p1 x r1.

Difficulty: Moderate

25. When environmental economists and policymakers examine the question of how environmental regulations impact the macro economy

A. they examine the expenditures made throughout the economy for pollution control.
B. they employ macro economic modeling to determine the relationship between pollution. control expenditures and national economic performance.
C. they use bottom up and/or top down methods.
D. all of the above


Difficulty: Moderate

26. When estimating the future costs of adopting future technology for environmental protections and the relevant time horizon is 10 years or longer, the cost projections are complicated due to

A. uncertainty regarding what technology will be available.
B. uncertainty regarding the availability of technology for widespread adoption.
C. uncertainty regarding the impact that future technology will have on costs.
D. all of the above.


Difficulty: Easy

27. In effect, the production of power (electricity) without pollution control leads to production distortions and is analogous to

A. public subsidies for agriculture.
B. subsidized coastal zone flood insurance.
C. neither A nor B.
D. both A and B.


Difficulty: Easy

28. A cost baseline analysis entails 
A. an estimation of what costs would be for a firm/industry without any environmental regulations.
B. an exact accounting of costs for a firm/industry with existing regulations at the moment.
C. the estimation of what the firm/industry future cost levels could be expected to be in the absence of a proposed regulation.
D. the estimation of what the firm/industry future/industry cost levels would be if the proposed environmental legislation were enacted.

 
Difficulty: Easy.

29. When an environmental regulation is enacted, firms and/or industries may experience adjustment costs in terms of reduced output. Firms and industries with a ____________ demand curve will experience _____________ adjustments in output.
A. steeper; greater
B. steeper; less
C. flatter; greater
D. flatter; less

 
Difficulty: Easy.

30. One of the critical elements of success for long run technical change and pollution cost controls in all manufacturing industries is the status and health of the ___________.
A. government
B. states rights
C. envirotech industry
D. cost accounting systems

 Difficulty: Easy.

 

31. In evaluating the costs of an environmental regulation we should use

A. the with/without principle

B. the before/after principle

C. the anti-baseline approach

D. the costs of insurance against regulation

32. For most countries the costs of environmental regulation amount to about

A. 1 to 2 percent of GDP

B. 10 to 15 percent of GDP

C. 50 – 60 percent of GDP

D. zero

33. The costs of environmental regulation in future years will be affected by

A. the value of the dollar on the foreign currency exchange

B. change in pollution-control technology

C. the U.S. poverty rate

D. the next presidential election

34. Pollution control costs will normally be lower when

A. firms are required to adopt certain pollution-control technologies

B. firms are given targets and allowed to meet them however the wish

C. firms have to make major adjustments to control emissions

D. firms participate voluntarily rather than via regulation

35. Social costs include

A. private costs and external costs

B. external costs only

C. long-run costs and private costs

D. private costs only

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
8
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 8 Benefit-Cost Analysis Costs
Author:
Barry Field

Connected Book

Environmental Economics 8th Edition Test Bank

By Barry Field

Test Bank General
View Product →

$24.99

100% satisfaction guarantee

Buy Full Test Bank

Benefits

Immediately available after payment
Answers are available after payment
ZIP file includes all related files
Files are in Word format (DOCX)
Check the description to see the contents of each ZIP file
We do not share your information with any third party