Boatright argues that the best way of achieving the deterrent effect for which laws governing corporate responsibility are intended, is by placing the weight of responsibility for misconduct on the corporation (and derivatively on the shareholders) as opposed to individuals who actually conduct the misconduct. Do you agree with his assessment on pragmatic grounds? On moral grounds? Why?
Due Asap!!! 300 words and more with 6 edition APA Format
ECONOMICS3332
Resource Economics, Winter 2013
Dalhousie University
Assignment #2
Professor M.L. Cross
Date due: Wednesday, March 27.
Each of the questions in this assignment is weighted equally. This assignment, like much of
what we have done in ECON 3332, employs the equimarginal principle.
The economic theory of the mine characterizes an optimum pattern for extracting an exhaustible
resource over time. Some resources, such as energy, cannot be recycled. Others, such as copper or
iron, can be recycled. Petroleum provides both types of resources. When petroleum is used as fuel,
it cannot be recycled. But plastic is manufactured from petroleum and plastic can be recycled. With
this in mind consider questions in Part I. (Tientenberg, Chapter 8, discusses recyclable resources.)
Part I
1. Suppose a limited stock of an exhaustible resource is available. Is it technically possible for
recycling to completely eliminate the constraint imposed by an exhaustible stock? Why or why
not?
2. Suppose that the total available amount of a nonrenewable resource is 1000 tons. The
resource can be recycled 95 percent of the resource can be recovered for the next round of use
each time the resource is recycled. In addition, suppose that recycling can continue into the
infinite future. What effect does recycling have on the total amount of the resource that is
available? Show your calculations.
3. Now suppose a firm is manufacturing plastic garbage cans. The firm can make garbage cans
from either recycled plastic or new plastic manufactured directly from petroleum or any
combination of the two – the two types are perfect substitutes. However, new plastic and old
plastic have different requirements for storage, transportation, and sorting. Therefore, the
marginal cost (MC) of garbage cans made from new plastic is:
MC1 = 2q1
The marginal cost of garbage cans made from recycled plastic is:
MC2 = 40 + 0.4q2.
The quantity of garbage cans made from new plastic is represented by q1, and q2 represents
garbage cans made from recycled plastic. The market for garbage cans is perfectly competitive.
Price is determined by the following inverse market demand function for garbage cans:
P = 40 – (q1 + q2).
How many garbage cans will be produced from new plastic and how many will be manufactured
from recycled plastic? Show your calculations and briefly explain your results. (Hint: Assume
that all garbage cans are made from new plastic. Will the marginal cost of cans made from new
plastic exceed the marginal cost of cans made from recycled plastic when the market is in
perfectly competitive equilibrium?)
4. Now, suppose the inverse demand function for garbage cans is P = 80 – 0.5(q1 + q2). Marginal
cost remains as defined in in problem (3). How many garbage cans will be manufactured from
new plastic? How many will be made from recycled plastic? Show your calculations and
explain your results. (Hint: When the market is in perfectly competitive equilibrium and the
firm is maximizing profits, it must be the case that P = MC1 = MC2. Why?)
Part II
Questions in Part II provide a simple example about the pricing of electricity. The example does
not include issues such as fluctuations in demand during a 24 hour cycle or during a seasonal
cycle, whether electrical utilities are nature monopolies, etc.
Let P represent the price of electricity in cents/kWh and Q represent the quantity of electricity in
millions of kWh/day. Suppose that the inverse demand function for electricity is
P = 12 – 0.5Q.
Assume that up to 3 million kWh/day can be generated by gas turbines at a marginal cost of 5
cents, up to 6 million kWh/day can be generated by coal fired generators at a marginal cost of 4
cents, and up to 8 million kWh/day can be generated by a hydroelectric dam at a marginal cost of
2 cents. No other sources of electricity are available.
5. Graph the marginal cost curve and the demand curve. Graphs must be labeled accurately in
order to obtain full credit.
6. What is the economically efficient price and quantity of electricity? Explain.
7. What is the economically efficient quantity of electricity to produce from each of the three
sources? Explain.
8. Now suppose the paper company announces that if it can obtain 2kWh/day of electricity at a
price of 2 cents/kWh, it can open a paper plant which will provide more jobs. The company
argues that the available generating capacity can provide more electricity than current users are
demanding. Further, according to the company, it is appropriate to provide the company with
electricity at 2 cents/kWh because that is the marginal cost of producing hydroelectricity from
the lowest cost source. Is it economically efficient to sell electricity to the paper company at a
price of 2 cents/kWh? Explain briefly.