Asked by Hunter Kinnett on Apr 24, 2024

verifed

Verified

There is great concern over the idea that citizens should have to provide specific identification to be able to vote in elections. A study of the costs and benefits of implementing a voter identification program is an example of

A) laissez-faire economics.
B) positive economics.
C) labor economics.
D) normative economics.

Voter Identification

Laws or measures requiring individuals to present specified forms of identification in order to vote, aimed at preventing voter fraud.

Positive Economics

An area of economics that focuses on factual and cause-and-effect relationships, avoiding any value judgments.

Labor Economics

A branch of economics that studies the dynamics of the markets for wage labor, including demand and supply, wage determination, and labor productivity.

  • Differentiate between positive and normative economics and their roles in economic analysis and policy recommendation.
verifed

Verified Answer

MM
mohamad majali8 days ago
Final Answer :
B
Explanation :
A study of the costs and benefits of implementing a voter identification program is an example of positive economics, which deals with objective analysis and facts about how the world is, as opposed to normative economics, which involves value judgments about how the world ought to be. Positive economics would look at the factual outcomes and implications of such a program without making value judgments about its desirability.