Interactive · quiz
Proportional Displacement and Attribution When new consumption claims represent a large fraction of total available capacity, the displacement of existing users becomes individually attributable rather than systemically diffuse, changing the political economy of allocation.
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What determines whether displacement is perceived as a specific actor's fault versus a general systemic pressure?
Whether the new claimant is a private corporation or a public entity Whether the new claim represents a measurable fraction of total capacity, making displacement traceable to a single decision Whether existing users were consulted before the new claim was approved Whether the displacement happens gradually over years or suddenly within weeks
Answer: Whether the new claim represents a measurable fraction of total capacity, making displacement traceable to a single decision. Proportionality creates attribution. If a new user takes 3% of total capacity, displaced users experience generalized scarcity. If a new user takes 30%, displaced users can point to a causal link between that specific arrival and their specific loss. The third option confuses procedural legitimacy with structural visibility.
Why does adding capacity in fixed-step increments create different political dynamics than smooth, continuous expansion?
Fixed-step additions create discrete before/after states where winners and losers are identifiable, while continuous expansion diffuses benefits and costs across time Fixed-step projects require environmental review while continuous expansion does not Engineering constraints make fixed-step additions more expensive per unit of capacity Regulatory agencies only have jurisdiction over projects that exceed minimum size thresholds
Answer: Fixed-step additions create discrete before/after states where winners and losers are identifiable, while continuous expansion diffuses benefits and costs across time. Discreteness creates legibility. A single new substation or transmission line serving a new claimant produces a visible 'who got what' moment. Continuous organic growth spreads benefits and costs across many actors over time, erasing clear causation. The fourth option describes a real permitting dynamic but misses the core mechanism of temporal concentration versus diffusion.
In allocation conflicts, what is the structural difference between 'fairness' and 'efficiency' as decision criteria?
Fairness prioritizes equal distribution while efficiency prioritizes speed of implementation Fairness requires stakeholder consent processes while efficiency requires only technical analysis Fairness asks 'who deserves this' based on distributional principles, while efficiency asks 'which use generates highest return' based on output measurement Fairness applies to public goods while efficiency applies to private markets
Answer: Fairness asks 'who deserves this' based on distributional principles, while efficiency asks 'which use generates highest return' based on output measurement. Fairness and efficiency answer different questions using incompatible metrics. Efficiency maximizes total value produced — a calculation. Fairness adjudicates competing moral claims to scarce resources — a judgment with no technical solution. The first option wrongly reduces fairness to equality rather than recognizing it as a broader distributional question.
When does proportional consumption create a coordination problem that pricing alone cannot resolve?
When the resource has already reached its supply ceiling, so higher prices cannot summon additional availability When consumers lack perfect information about current pricing levels When the resource is publicly owned and therefore not subject to market mechanisms When demand elasticity is low and consumers continue purchasing despite price increases
Answer: When the resource has already reached its supply ceiling, so higher prices cannot summon additional availability. Price works by two mechanisms: rationing existing supply among claimants, and incentivizing new supply. At a hard capacity boundary, only the first mechanism remains functional. Price can decide who wins among existing claimants but cannot expand the pie, forcing an explicit zero-sum choice. The fourth option describes inelastic demand, which is a different phenomenon from supply-side physical constraints.
Which scenario does NOT exhibit proportional displacement where a single actor's claim creates individually attributable impacts?
A hospital opening in a region where medical specialists are scarce, hiring 40% of available doctors and forcing other clinics to reduce services A reservoir allocation where a new industrial user receives a permit for 25% of annual flow, reducing agricultural allocations proportionally A social media platform where each additional user increases the value of the network for all existing users through expanded connection possibilities A zoning decision that converts 30% of a district's commercial space to residential, reducing retail density and foot traffic for remaining stores
Answer: A social media platform where each additional user increases the value of the network for all existing users through expanded connection possibilities. Network effects exhibit positive feedback — each user increases value for others rather than consuming a rival resource. The other three scenarios show clear proportional displacement: one actor's gain is other actors' measurable, attributable loss. The reservoir example might seem most obvious, but the hospital and zoning cases are structurally identical — a large proportional claim that other users can trace to a specific decision.
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