Click on the button to go to the problem. © 2011 Pearson Education Efficiency and Fairness of...

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Click on the button to go to the problem

Transcript of Click on the button to go to the problem. © 2011 Pearson Education Efficiency and Fairness of...

Page 1: Click on the button to go to the problem. © 2011 Pearson Education Efficiency and Fairness of Markets 6 CHECKPOINTS.

Click on the button to go to the problem

Page 2: Click on the button to go to the problem. © 2011 Pearson Education Efficiency and Fairness of Markets 6 CHECKPOINTS.

© 2011 Pearson Education

Efficiency and Fairness of Markets

6CHECKPOINTS

Page 3: Click on the button to go to the problem. © 2011 Pearson Education Efficiency and Fairness of Markets 6 CHECKPOINTS.

Click on the button to go to the problem

Problem 1Problem 1

Problem 2Problem 2

Problem 3Problem 3

Problem 1Problem 1

Problem 2Problem 2

Clickerversion

Clickerversion

Problem 3Problem 3

Problem 1Problem 1

Problem 2Problem 2

Problem 3Problem 3

Checkpoint 6.1 Checkpoint 6.3Checkpoint 6.2

Problem 4Problem 4

Problem 5Problem 5

Problem 4Problem 4

Problem 5Problem 5

Problem 4Problem 4

Problem 5Problem 5

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Click on the button to go to the problem

Problem 1Problem 1

Problem 2Problem 2

Problem 3Problem 3

Problem 2Problem 2

Problem 1Problem 1 Clickerversion

Clickerversion

Clickerversion

Clickerversion

Checkpoint 6.4 Checkpoint 6.5

Problem 4Problem 4

Problem 5Problem 5

Problem 3Problem 3

Problem 4Problem 4

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Practice Problem 1

Which method is used to allocate the following scarce resources?

• Campus parking space between student areas and faculty areas

• A spot in a restricted student parking area

• Textbooks

• Host city for the Olympic Games

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Solution

1.Campus parking is allocated by command.

2.The spot in a restricted student parking area is allocated on a first-come, first-served basis.

3.Textbooks are allocated by market price (sharing).

4.The Olympic Games is allocated by contest.

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Study Plan Problem

Which method is used to allocate campus parking space between student areas and faculty areas?

A. Command

B. First-come, first-served

C. Contest

D. Market price

E. Majority rule

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Which method is used to allocate a spot in a restricted student parking area?

A. Command

B. Market price

C. Contest

D. First-come, first-served

E. Majority rule

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Which method is used to allocate textbooks?

A. Command

B. Market price

C. Contest

D. First-come, first-served

E. Majority rule

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Which method is used to allocate the host city for the Olympic Games?

A. Command

B. Market price

C. Contest

D. First-come, first-served

E. Majority rule

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Practice Problem 2The figure shows a nation’s PPF and Table 2 shows its marginal benefit and marginal cost schedules.

What is the marginal benefit from bananas when 1 pound of bananas is grown?

What is the marginal cost of growing 1 pound of bananas?

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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SolutionMarginal benefit is the amount of coffee that the nation is willing to give up to get one additional banana.

The marginal benefit from bananas is 3 pounds of coffee.

Marginal cost is the amount of coffee that the nation must give up to get one additional banana.

The marginal cost of growing 1 pound of bananas is 1 pounds of coffee.

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Practice Problem 3The figure shows a nation’s PPF and the table shows the marginal benefit and marginal cost schedules.

On the figure, mark a point of production efficiency, but with too much coffee produced to be a point of allocative efficiency.

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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SolutionPoint A on the figure shows production efficiency (on PPF) but not allocative efficiency.

Because with 1 banana, marginal benefit does not equal the marginal cost of a banana (from table).

Because marginal benefit from a banana exceeds marginal cost of a banana, too few bananas are produced.

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Practice Problem 4The figure shows a nation’s PPF and Table 2 shows its marginal benefit and marginal cost schedules.

On the figure, mark the nation’s point of allocative efficiency, point B.

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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SolutionPoint B on the figure is the point of allocative efficiency because it is on the PPF and

when the quantity of bananas is 2 pounds, marginal benefit frim a banana equals the marginal cost of a banana (from the table).

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Practice Problem 5

AC/DC’s “Black Ice” tour breaks records down underThe tour promoters reported that the 40,000 tickets for the March 6 gig in Perth, Australia, sold out in seven minutes—a record. Many people who camped out overnight missed getting a ticket.

Source: WAToday, May 25, 2009

What is the method used to allocate AC/DC concert tickets? When the March 6 gig sold out, promoters announced a March 8 gig, with tickets going on sale two days later. Was the allocation of tickets efficient?

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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SolutionFirst-come, first-served is used to allocate AC/DC concert tickets.

The allocation was efficient if the willingness to pay (the ticket price plus the opportunity cost of the buyer’s time), which is also the marginal benefit, equaled the marginal cost of providing one more seat.

CHECKPOINT 6.1

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Practice Problem 1The figure shows the demand curve for DVDs and the market price of a DVD.

What is the willingness to pay for the 20th DVD?

What is the value of the 10th DVD and the consumer surplus on the 10th DVD?

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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SolutionThe willingness to pay for the 20th DVD is the price on the demand curve at 20 DVDs, which is $15.

The value of the 10th DVD is its marginal benefit, which also is the maximum price that someone is willing to pay for it.

The value of the 10th DVD is $20.

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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The consumer surplus on the 10th DVD is its marginal benefit minus the price paid for the DVD.

The length of the green arrow in the figure shows the consumer surplus on the 10th DVD.

The consumer surplus on the 10th DVD is $20 $15, which equals $5.

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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Practice Problem 2

The figure shows the demand curve for DVDs and the market price of a DVD.

What is the quantity of DVDs bought and what is the consumer surplus on DVDs?

What is the amount spent on DVDs and what is the total benefit from the DVDs bought?

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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SolutionThe quantity of DVDs bought is 20 a day.

The consumer surplus is the area of the green triangle, which equals($25 - $15) x 20 ÷ 2.

Consumer surplus is $100.

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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The amount spent on DVDs is the price multiplied by the quantity bought, which is the area of the blue rectangle.

The amount spent equals $15 x 20 = $300.

The total benefit from DVDs is the amount spent on DVDs ($300) plus the consumer surplus from DVDs ($100), which is $400.

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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Practice Problem 3

The figure shows the demand curve for DVDs and the market price of a DVD.

If the price of a DVD rises from $15 to $20, what is the change in consumer surplus?

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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SolutionIf the price of a DVD rises to $20, the quantity of DVDs bought decreases to 10 a day.

The consumer surplus decreases to the area of the green triangle, which is ($25 $20) x 10 ÷ 2. The consumer surplus is $25.

The consumer surplus decreases by $75 (from $100 to $25).

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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Practice Problem 4Online travel agencies drop ticket booking fees

Online airline ticket agents have dropped the $7 booking fee and expedia.com and priceline.com have also dropped the $50 cancelation fee. Expedia.com reports that its ticket sales have increased by double-digits.

Source: USA Today, June 3, 2009

Distinguish between the price of a flight and the value of a flight before the fees were dropped.

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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SolutionThe price of a flight is what you pay the travel agent—the price of the airline ticket plus the booking fee.

The value of a flight is the marginal benefit you get from using the airline ticket.

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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Practice Problem 5Online travel agencies drop ticket booking fees

Online airline ticket agents have dropped the $7 booking fee and expedia.com and priceline.com have also dropped the $50 cancelation fee. Expedia.com reports that its ticket sales have increased by double-digits.

Source: USA Today, June 3, 2009

With the removal of the booking fee, how have the price and the consumer surplus from flights changed?

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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SolutionThe removal of the booking fee decreases the price of a flight.

The quantity of flights demanded increases —a movement down along the demand curve for flights.

Consumer surplus equals the value (marginal benefit) minus the price of a flight, summed over the number of flights bought.

Marginal benefit minus the price of a flight has increased, so the consumer surplus from any one flight has increased.

With more flight bought, the consumer surplus has increased.

CHECKPOINT 6.2

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Practice Problem 1The figure shows the supply curve for DVDs and the market price of a DVD.

What is the minimum supply price of the 20th DVD?

What is the marginal cost of the 10th DVD and the producer surplus on the 10th DVD?

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Solution

The minimum supply price of the 20th DVD is the marginal cost of the 20th DVD which is $15.

The marginal cost of the 10th DVD is equal to the minimum supply price for the 10th DVD which is $10.

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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The producer surplus on the 10th DVD is the market price minus the marginal cost of producing the 10th DVD.

The length of the blue arrow in the figure shows the producer surplus on the 10th DVD.

The producer surplus on the 10th DVD is $15 $10, which equals $5.

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Practice Problem 2

The figure shows the supply curve of DVDs and the market price of a DVD.

What is the quantity of DVDs sold and what is the producer surplus on DVDs?

What is the total revenue from DVDs and what is the cost of producing the DVDs sold?

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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SolutionThe quantity of DVDs sold is 20 a day.

The producer surplus is the area of the blue triangle, which equals($15 - $5) x 20 ÷ 2.

Producer surplus is $100.

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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The total revenue is the price multiplied by the quantity sold, which is the area of the blue triangle plus the red area.

The total revenue equals $15 x 20 = $300.

The total cost of producing DVDs is the red area, which equals the total revenue ($300) minus the producer surplus from DVDs ($100), which is $200.

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Practice Problem 3

The figure shows the supply curve of DVDs and the market price of a DVD.

If the price of a DVD falls from $15 to $10, what is the change in producer surplus?

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Solution

If the price of a DVD falls to $10, the quantity of DVDs produced decreases to 10 a day.

The producer surplus, the area of the blue triangle, decreases to ($10 – $5) x 10 ÷ 2, which is $25.

The change in producer surplus is a decrease of $75 (from $100 down to $25).

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Practice Problem 4Dealership has less than a week to sell all its cars

Chrysler is shutting 800 dealerships and they must be closed by June 9, 2009. O’Bryhim, a dealer in Virginia, today sold a new Nitro at a discount of 40 percent—$17,510 instead of the regular price of $29,170. As June 9 approaches, O’Bryhim expects he will have to increase the discount and mark prices down further to sell all the cars on his lot.

Source: CNN.com, June 3, 2009

Distinguish between the price of a new car and the cost of the car.

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Solution

The price of a new car is the amount received by the car dealership when it is sold—the regular price minus the discount.

The dealer’s cost of a new car (the marginal cost of a car) is what the dealer paid Chrysler (the manufacturer) for the car.

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Practice Problem 5

Dealership has less than a week to sell all its cars

Chrysler is shutting 800 dealerships and they must be closed by June 9, 2009. O’Bryhim, a dealer in Virginia, today sold a new Nitro at a discount of 40 percent—$17,510 instead of the regular price of $29,170. As June 9 approaches, O’Bryhim expects he will have to increase the discount and mark prices down further to sell all the cars on his lot.

Source: CNN.com, June 3, 2009

If next week, O'Bryhim increases the discount to 50 percent, how will the producer surplus on a new Nitro change?

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Solution

The producer surplus on a new Nitro is the price O'Bryhim receives for the Nitro when it is sold minus O'Bryhim’s cost of the Nitro.

As the discount increases, the price received falls and the producer surplus decreases.

CHECKPOINT 6.3

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Practice Problem 1The figure shows the market for paper.

At the market equilibrium, what are the consumer surplus, producer surplus, and total surplus?

Is the market for paper efficient? Why or why not?

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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Solution

Market equilibrium is 40 tons a day at a price of $3 a ton.

Consumer surplus equalsthe area of the green triangle, which is $(9 – 3) x 40 ÷ 2.Consumer surplus is $120.

Producer surplus equals the area of the blue triangle, which is ($3 - $1) x 40 ÷ 2.Producer surplus is $40.

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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Total surplus is the sum of consumer surplus ($120) and producer surplus ($40), which is $160.

The market is efficient because marginal benefit (on the demand curve) equals marginal cost (on the supply curve) and total surplus is maximized.

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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Practice Problem 2

The figure shows the market for paper.

A news magazine lobbying group persuades the government to pass a law that requires producers to sell 50 tons of paper a day.

Is the market for paper efficient? Why or why not?

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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Solution

The market is inefficient because at the quantity 50 tons a day, marginal cost exceeds marginal benefit.

Deadweight loss equals the area of the gray triangle 1 in the figure.

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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Practice Problem 3The figure shows the market for paper.

An environmental lobbying group persuades the government to pass a law that limits the quantity of paper that producers sell to 20 tons a day.

Is the market efficient? Why or why not? What is the deadweight loss?

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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SolutionThis market is now inefficient because at a quantity of 20 tons of paper a day, marginal benefit exceeds marginal cost.

Deadweight loss equals the area of the gray triangle 2 in the figure.

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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Practice Problem 4National parks to offer free-entry weekends

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has urged everyone to visit the national parks over the weekends of June 20-21, July 18-19, and August 15-16 when admission will be free. Kathy Kupper, spokeswoman for the National Parks Service, said that she couldn’t remember the fee having been waived in more than 20 years.

Source: Los Angeles Times, June 3, 2009

How will waiving the admission charge influence consumer surplus?

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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SolutionLowering the admission charge to zero will increase consumer surplus.

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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Practice Problem 5

National parks to offer free-entry weekends

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar has urged everyone to visit the national parks over the weekends of June 20-21, July 18-19, and August 15-16 when admission will be free. Kathy Kupper, spokeswoman for the National Parks Service, said that she couldn’t remember the fee having been waived in more than 20 years.

Source: Los Angeles Times, June 3, 2009

Will the number of visitors be efficient on a weekend when the fee is waived?

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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SolutionOn a weekend when the fee is waived, the marginal benefit from a visit is zero.

If a park does not become overcrowded and the marginal cost of a visit is also zero, then the number of visitors is efficient.

But if overcrowding makes the marginal cost greater than zero, then the park will have too many visitors.

CHECKPOINT 6.4

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Practice Problem 1

A winter storm cuts the power supply and isolates a small town in the mountains. The people rush to buy candles from the town store, which is the only source of candles. The store owner decides to ration the candles to one per family, but to keep the price of a candle unchanged.

Who gets to use the candles?

Who receives the consumer benefit and who receives to producer benefit?

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Solution

The people who buy candles from the town store are not necessarily the people who use the candles.

A buyer from the town store can sell a candle and will do so if he or she can get a price that exceeds his or her marginal benefit.

The people who value the candles most—who are willing to pay the most—will use the candles.

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Only the people who are willing to pay the most for candles receive the consumer surplus on candles.

The store owner receives the same producer surplus as normal.

People who sell the candles they buy from the store receive additional producer surplus.

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Study Plan Problem

A winter storm cuts the power supply and isolates a small town. People rush to buy candles from the town store, the only source of candles. The store owner ration the candles to one per family, but to keep the price of a candle unchanged.

Who receives the consumer surplus?

Who receives the producer surplus?

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Who receives the consumer surplus?

A. the store owner

B. families that value the candle above the market price

C. families that buy the candle from the store owner

D. the store owner and the families that buy candles from the store owner

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Who receives the consumer surplus?

A. The store owner and the families that resell their candles for more than the store’s market price

B. The families that buy candles from the store owner

C. The families that use the candles that they have bought from other families

D. Only the store owner who sells the candles

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Practice Problem 2

A winter storm cuts the power supply and isolates a small town in the mountains. The people rush to buy candles from the town store, which is the only source of candles. The store owner decides to ration the candles to one per family, but to keep the price of a candle unchanged.

Is the allocation efficient?

Is the allocation fair?

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Solution

The allocation is efficient because the people who value the candles most use them.

Two views of fairness:

The rules view is that if the rule of one candle per family is followed and exchange is voluntary, then the outcome is fair.

But the results view is that if the candles are allocated unequally, then the allocation is unfair.

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Study Plan Problem

A winter storm cuts the power supply and isolates a small town. People rush to buy candles from the town store, the only source of candles. The store owner ration the candles to one per family, but to keep the price of a candle unchanged.

Is the allocation efficient?

Is the allocation fair?

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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The outcome is __________.

A. inefficient because not everyone ends up with a candle

B. efficient if the people who use the candles value the candles at more than the market price

C. inefficient because both consumers and producers can receive a producer surplus

D. inefficient if some consumers receive a smaller consumer surplus than others

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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According to the fair _______ view, the outcome is considered ________.

A. results; fair if the people who value a box of candles most end up with the candles

B. rules; fair because the rule of one box of candles per family is unfair

C. results; unfair if there are not enough boxes of candles

D. rules; fair if exchange is voluntary

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Practice Problem 3National parks to offer free-entry weekends

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said he hoped American families would take the opportunity during these hard times to enjoy an affordable weekend vacation in our national parks. Most Americans live within an hour’s drive of a national park.

Source: Los Angeles Times, June 3, 2009

Which American families will most likely visit the national parks on the free weekends?

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Solution

Most of the visitors will be those who own a car and don’t work on these weekends.

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Practice Problem 4National parks to offer free-entry weekends

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said he hoped American families would take the opportunity during these hard times to enjoy an affordable weekend vacation in our national parks. Most Americans live within an hour’s drive of a national park.

Source: Los Angeles Times, June 3, 2009

Is the policy to waive the admission fair?

CHECKPOINT 6.5

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Solution

The idea of waiving the admission is to allow families to enjoy an affordable vacation in these hard times.

If the families hit by the hard times are the ones that visit the parks, then, in the fair result view, the policy is fair.

But if families hit by the hard times are the ones who do not visit, then, in the fair result view, the policy is unfair.

If the families visit the parks voluntarily, then, in the fair rules view, no matter which families visit, the policy is fair.

CHECKPOINT 6.5