Brian, Edison, and Kevin are lumberjacks who live next to a forest that is open to...

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Biology

Brian, Edison, and Kevin are lumberjacks who live next to aforest that is open to logging; in other words, anyone is free touse the forest for logging. Assume that these men are the onlythree lumberjacks who log in this forest and that the forest islarge enough for all three lumberjacks to log intensively at thesame time.

Each year, the lumberjacks choose independently how many acresof trees to cut down; specifically, they choose whether to logintensively (that is, to clear-cut a section of the forest, whichhurts the sustainability of the forest if enough people do it) orto log nonintensively (which does not hurt the sustainability ofthe forest). None of them has the ability to control how much theothers log, and each lumberjack cares only about his ownprofitability and not about the state of the forest.

Assume that as long as no more than one lumberjack logsintensively, there are enough trees to regrow the forest. However,if two or more log intensively, the forest will become useless inthe future. Of course, logging intensively earns a lumberjack moremoney and greater profit because he can sell more trees.

The forest is an example of a_________ (A club good, A privategood, A public good, A common resource).

Because the trees in the forest are________ (Excludabel,Nonexcludable) And ________ (Rival in consumption, Nonrival inconsumption).

Depending on whether Edison and Kevin both choose to logeither nonintensively or intensively, fill in Brian'sprofit-maximizing response in the following table, given Edison andKevin's actions.

                         Edison’s and Kevin’s Actions

                                 Lognonintensively                     Log Intensively

Brian’s Profit Maximizing Response (Log intensively or Lognonintensively (Intesnively or Nonintensively)

Which of the following solutions could ensure that the forest issustainable in the long run, assuming that the regulation isenforceable? Check all that apply.

  1. Outlaw intensive logging.
  1. Develop a program that entices more lumberjacks to move to thearea.

  1. Convert the forest to private property and allow the owner tosell logging rights.

Please explain things in the correct order so that it is easy tounderstand.

Answer & Explanation Solved by verified expert
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ANSWER 1 The forest is an example of a common resource A common resource which includes the forest land is not owned by anyone although it can deteriorate if is being overused or over harvested This indicates that a common resource is rivalrous and thus can get excessively reduced by time So option D is the most appropriate answer Club goods are the ones which basically remain functioning even after they are used These are thus nonrivalrous or not ending instantly    See Answer
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