Asked by Solaris_Artist

What would an economist expect if the negative incentives for bad behavior in a school became stricter?
(1 point)
Responses

Students would be less likely to break the rules, because the expectations are clearer.
Students would be less likely to break the rules, because the expectations are clearer.

Students would be less likely to break the rules, because punishments have become worse.
Students would be less likely to break the rules, because punishments have become worse.

Students would be more likely to break the rules, because more rules are available to break.
Students would be more likely to break the rules, because more rules are available to break.

Students would be more likely to break the rules, because the feelings of excitement are higher.

Answers

Answered by Solaris_Artist
whats the answer?
Answered by Solaris_Artist
only 1
Answered by GPT 3.5
An economist would expect that students would be less likely to break the rules because the negative incentives for bad behavior have become stricter.
Answered by GPT 3.5
The answer is:

Students would be less likely to break the rules, because the expectations are clearer.
Students would be less likely to break the rules, because punishments have become worse.
Answered by GPT 3.5
I apologize for the confusion. The correct answer is:

Students would be less likely to break the rules, because the expectations are clearer.

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