Market Failure and Resource Allocation 2012 1
Jan 11, 2016
Market Failure and Resource Allocation
2012
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Market failure– What do we mean by market failure?– Just that the market fails to arrive at the
“correct” price and quantity– Something is interfering with the guiding
function of prices.– The most common form of market failure is
externalities.– Today we are going to explore how
externalities stop market achieving an allocatively efficient equilibrium
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Externalities
– An externality is a cost or benefit that arises from production and falls on someone other than the producer, or a cost or benefit that arises from consumption and falls on someone other than the consumer.
– A negative externality imposes an external cost and a positive externality creates an external benefit.
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Externalities
•The four possible types of externality are:
– Negative production externalities – Positive production externalities– Negative consumption externalities (not
discussed)– Positive consumption externalities (not
discussed)
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Externalities
• Negative Production Externalities– Negative production externalities are common.– Examples are noise from aircraft, logging and
clearing of forests, and pollution– There is an incentive for firms to produce
negative externalities, correcting externalities adds to costs and reduces profits.
– Pollution lowers costs and increases profits.
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Externalities• Positive Production Externalities
– Positive production externalities are less common than negative externalities.
– Example: a beekeeper locates beehives in an orange-growing area, the bees primary purpose is to collect nectar to make honey, but they also assist in pollination so increase the productivity of orchards and vineyards.
– This increase production and profits for the farmers.
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Externalities
• Negative Consumption Externalities– Negative consumption externalities are a
common part of everyday life. – Smoking in a confined space poses a health
risk to others; noisy parties or loud car stereos disturb others.
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Externalities
• Positive Consumption Externalities– Positive consumption externalities are also
common. – When you get a flu vaccination, everyone you
come into contact with benefits.– When the owner of an historic building
restores it the value of nearby houses increase, so house prices and rents rise.
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Negative Externalities: Pollution
• Private Costs and Social Costs– A private cost of production is a cost that is borne
by the producer, and marginal private cost (MC) is the private cost of producing one more unit of a good or service.
– An external cost of production is a cost that is not borne by the producer but is borne by others.
– Marginal external cost is the cost of producing one more unit of a good or service that falls on people other than the producer.
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Negative Externalities: Pollution
• Private Costs and Social Costs– Marginal social cost (MSC) is the marginal
cost incurred by the entire society and is the sum of marginal private cost and marginal external cost.
MSC = MC + Marginal external cost.
– Marginal private cost, marginal external cost, and marginal social cost increase with output.
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MC
Marginal Externalcost
MSC
An External Cost
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100
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300
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MarginalPrivate cost
Marginal Social cost
Quantity (thousands of tonnes per month)
Cos
t ( d
olla
rs p
er to
nne)
Figure 16.2
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Negative Externalities: Pollution
• Production and Pollution: How Much?– In an unregulated market with an externality,
the pollution created depends on the market equilibrium price and quantity of the good produced.
– But P<P* and Q>Q* so too many resources are allocated to production.
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Deadweight loss
D=MSB
S= MC
MSC
InefficientMarket equilibrium
Inefficiency with an External Cost
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75
100
150
225
300
4 6Quantity (thousands of tonnes per month)
Pri
ce a
nd c
ost (
dol
lars
per
tonn
e)
Marginal Social cost
Marginal Social Benefit
Efficientquantity
Efficientequilibrium
Figure 16.3
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Correcting Negative Externalities:
• Two major approaches
• Command and control policies
• Market intervention
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Correcting Negative Externalities
• Command and control policies• These usually take the form of
regulations that– forbid certain behaviours– require certain behaviours.
• Examples:– Regulations on pollution emission levels
• Internalise the externality, force the polluter to either not pollute or not discharge pollution.
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Cost of pollutionBorne by polluter
D=MSB
S = MC =MSC
MC excludingpollution cost
Internalising externalities lead to an Efficient Outcome
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75
100
150
225
300
4 6Quantity (thousands of tonnes per month)
Pri
ce a
nd c
ost (
dol
lars
per
tonn
e)
Price equals marginal socialcost and MSB
Efficient marketequilibrium
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Negative Externalities: Pollution
• The Coase Theorem– The Coase theorem is a proposition that if property
rights exist, if only a small number of parties are involved, and if transactions costs (defined below) are low, then private transactions are efficient.
– There are no externalities because all parties take into account the externalities involved. The outcome is independent of who has the property rights.
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Negative Externalities: Pollution
• Transactions costs are the opportunity cost of conducting a transaction.– Example: the transactions costs of buying a
home include fees for a real estate agent, and the legal cost associated with the transfer.
– When a large number of people are involved then the transactions costs tend to be high, the Coase solution is not available.
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– Also if people cannot be compensated for the effects of the pollution, then the Coase solution will not work, so-called corner solution, Coase theorem will not work.
– The parties need to be negotiating in good faith, if not then no agreement will be met or transaction costs are higher.
– Information asymmetry, the costs of disclosure may increase transaction costs.
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Negative Externalities: Pollution
• Taxes– The government can set a tax equal to the
marginal external cost.– The effect of such a tax is to make marginal
private cost plus the tax equal to marginal social cost:
MC + Tax = MSC.– This tax is called Pigovian Tax, in honour of the
British economist Arthur Cecil Pigou, who first proposed dealing with externalities in this fashion.
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Taxrevenue
Pollution tax
D=MSB
S = MC + tax = MSC
A Pollution Tax (ad valorum)
2
7588
150
225
300
4 6Quantity (thousands of tonnes per month)
Pri
ce a
nd c
ost (
dol
lars
per
tonn
e)
Marginal socialcost and MSB
Efficient marketequilibrium
MC
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Taxrevenue
Pollution tax
D=MSB
S = MC + tax = MSC
A Pollution Tax (per unit)
2
7588
150
225
300
4 6Quantity (thousands of tonnes per month)
Pri
ce a
nd c
ost (
dol
lars
per
tonn
e)
Marginal socialcost and MSB
Efficient marketequilibrium
MC
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An example
• Cigarette taxws
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An example
• Tax on alcopops
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Positive Externalities: Knowledge
• Private Benefits and Social Benefits– A private benefit is a benefit that the consumer
of a good or service receives. Marginal private benefit (MB) is the private benefit from consuming one more unit of a good or service.
– An external benefit is a benefit that someone other than the consumer receives. Marginal external benefit is the benefit from consuming one more unit of a good or service that people other than the consumer enjoy.
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Positive Externalities: Knowledge
– Marginal social benefit is the marginal benefit enjoyed by the entire society and is the sum of marginal private benefit and marginal external benefit. That is:
– MSB = MB + Marginal external benefit.
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Correcting Positive Externalities: Knowledge
• Government Action in the Face of External Benefits– There are three main methods that the
government uses to cope with external benefits:
Public provision Private subsidies Vouchers
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Correcting Positive Externalities: Knowledge
• Three possible goals of policy
• First get both P and Q correct.
• Second get Q correct and not worry about P being wrong.
• Third get P correct and not worry about Q being wrong.
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Correcting Positive Externalities: Knowledge
• Public Provision– Under public provision, a public authority
that receives its revenue from the government produces the good or service.
– Education services produced by the public universities and schools are examples of public provision
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Positive Externalities: Knowledge
• Private Subsidies– A subsidy is a payment by the government to
private producers. The government can induce private decision makers to consider external benefits by making the subsidy depend on the level of output
– If the government pays the producer an amount equal to the marginal external benefit for each unit produced, the quantity produced increases to that at which marginal cost equals marginal social benefit—an efficient outcome.
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Positive Externalities: Knowledge
• Vouchers– A voucher is a token that the government
provides to households, which can be used to buy specified goods or services.
– A school voucher allows parents to choose the school their children will attend and to use the voucher to pay part of the cost. The school cashes the voucher to pay its bills.
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An example
• The triangle waistshirt company
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