--%>

Example of distributive efficiency in economics

I found a seashell which you would truly like to have, and you determined a coconut that I would truly like to include. Trading your coconut for my seashell would improve: (i) allocative efficiency. (ii) productive efficiency. (iii) distributive efficiency. (iv) qualitative efficiency. (v) quantitative efficiency.

Hello guys I want your advice. Please recommend some views for above economic efficiency problem.

   Related Questions in Public Economics

  • Q : Production in economically efficient

    Production based upon economically efficient mixtures of resources: (w) Maximizes production costs for a specified output. (x) Minimizes output from a specified cost. (y) Maximizes output or/and minimizes costs. (z) is unlikely since resources are unl

  • Q : Problem on equivalent amounts of goods

    Can someone help me in finding out the right answer from the given options. According to the equivalent share criterion of distribution, individuals must: (i) Share income according to personal requirement. (ii) All produce equivalent shares of output. (iii) Each cons

  • Q : Define positive technical statement on

    A positive technical statement on the subject of college life is which: (1) college deans are more moral than department chairs. (2) elite colleges frequently admit the wrong students. (3) history professors and accounting professors deserve similar pay. (4) on averag

  • Q : The closest illustration of a free good

    Which would be the closest illustration of a free good: (1) A can of tuna bought along with food stamps, (2) dead leaves which require raking into fall, (3) water through a drinking fountain at a park, (4) a sample of soap acquired in the mail and (5)

  • Q : Why is Scarcity existed for human

    Scarcity exists since human desires are: (i) minute relative to the means available to satisfy them. (ii) heavily affected by advertising and wants to “keep up along with the Joneses.” (iii) immoral. (iv) controllable merely through brainw

  • Q : Excessive production as a problem Can

    Can someone help me in finding out the right answer from the given options. Governments which attempt to utilize ‘needs’ or ‘equality’ as the bases for distributing goods are NOT probable to: (1) Encounter extreme production as a problem. (2) R

  • Q : Comparative Systems- Central planning

    Can someone help me in finding out the right answer from the following options. The command economy is mainly based on: (i) Laissez faire govt. policies and private property rights. (ii) ‘kolkhoz’ decision making. (iii) Well tuning production to match the

  • Q : Hedonistic calculus–regulation of human

    Social welfare is exploited while a “hedonistic calculus” regulates all human action as per the interventionist “liberal”: (i) John Stuart Mill. (ii) Thorstein Veblen. (iii) Milton Friedman. (iv) Karl Marx. (v)

  • Q : Explain the problem of Macroeconomics

    Hello guys please suggest your answer for the given problem: A problem which MOST involves a macroeconomic problem is the result of a: (w) drought on the price of corn. (x) tax reform on the incomes of financial planners. (y) steel

  • Q : LEAST relation of study of economics

    Please help me to solve the problem that is given below: The study of economics is LEAST related along with: (w) humanity in its wealth getting and wealth using activities. (x) physiological interpretations of labo