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Mixed Economies & Market Failure
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Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions. What goods & services should be produced? How should the goods & services.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Mixed Economies & Market Failure

Page 2: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

All economies must answer 3 questions.

What goods & services should be produced?

How should the goods & services be produced?

Who gets the goods & services that are produced?

Page 3: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Two extreme types of economies

communism or socialism

capitalism

Page 4: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Who owns & controls the physical capital?

In communism & socialism: the government

In capitalism: private parties

Page 5: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

How are resources allocated?

In communism & socialism: through central planning & government administration.

In capitalism: through contractual agreements between private parties.

Page 6: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

In the real world, there are no purely communist or socialist economies and no purely capitalist economies.

All economies are mixtures.

Page 7: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Some sectors of all economies are privately owned and controlled and some sectors are owned and controlled by the government.

The extent of the mix differs from economy to economy.

Page 8: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

capitalistic or market economies

communistic/socialistic

or centrally-planned

economies

U.S., Canada, Australia, Japan, most of western Europe

Russia, China, N. Korea, most of eastern Europe

Sweden, India, Israel

Mixed Economies

Page 9: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Regardless of the type of economy, it is important to remember that people respond to economic incentives.

Page 10: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Example

In the former Soviet Union, managers producing window glass were rewarded by the number of pounds of glass they produced.  What was the result? 

Very thick glass.  

They changed the reward system to be based on the quantity of glass as measured by the area.  The result?

Ultra-thin glass. 

Conclusion:  People respond to incentives, so be careful what you reward. 

Page 11: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Lack of competition

Externalities

Public goods

Reasons Markets May Fail to Attain an Ideal Allocation of Resources

Page 12: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Firms may collude to limit output and keep prices high.

Lack of Competition

Page 13: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Externalities are spillover effects.Good externalities are external benefits.Bad externalities are external costs.

Externalities

Page 14: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

benefits generated by the action of an individual or group that favorably influences the welfare of non-paying parties

example: gardens

External Benefits

Page 15: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

costs that result from an action of an individual or group that harms the welfare of non-consenting parties.

examples: litterbugs, drunk drivers, polluters

External Costs

Page 16: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

social benefits = private benefits received by the decision-maker + any external benefits.

When there are no external benefits, private and social benefits are equal.

Social Benefits

Page 17: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

social costs = private costs incurred by the decision-maker + any external costs.

When there are no external costs, private and social costs are equal.

Social Costs

Page 18: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

project cost to a firm : $1500 amount of aggravation to neighbors: $500

What is the social cost?

social cost = private cost + external cost = 1500 + 500 = $2000.

Example

Page 19: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

project cost to a firm : $1500

project revenues to firm: $1800

If the firm ignores the effects on the neighbors, will the firm undertake the project?

Yes, the firm will undertake the project, because

private benefits ($1800) exceed private costs (1500).

Example continued

Page 20: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

recall: social cost = $2000 project revenues to firm = $1800

social benefits = private benefits + external benefits = $1800 + $0 = $1800

Since social costs > social benefits,the project should not be undertaken.

From the viewpoint of society, however,

the project should not be undertaken.

Page 21: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

An acceptable solution to an externality will be found if

• ownership of property is clearly defined,

• the number of people involved is small,

• the costs of bargaining are negligible.

Coase Theorem

Page 22: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

These types of problems are unlikely to be resolved appropriately without government intervention.

In many situations, many people are affected

and the costs of bargaining are substantial.

Page 23: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

priceprice

quantityquantity

Demand

External Costs

Supply - ignoring externality

Supply - taking externality into consideration

P2

Q2

P1

Q1

Page 24: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

When an external cost is ignored,

the price is too low, and

the quantity is too high.

Effects of External Costs

Page 25: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

price

quantity

Demand - ignoring externality

External Benefits

Supply

Demand-taking externality

into consideration

Q2Q1

P2

P1

Page 26: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

When an external benefit is ignored,

the price is too low, and

the quantity is too low.

Effects of External Benefits

Page 27: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Examples:

• national defense

• dams

Public Goods

What are the characteristics of these goods that make them public goods?

Page 28: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Public goods are jointly consumed goods. If one person gets the good, everybody gets it. One person’s consumption of the good does not diminish the amount available for others to consume.

Also, the good can not divided up into separate portions for different individuals. Once a public good has been provided to one person, there is no easy way to prevent others from consuming it as well.

Characteristics of Public Goods

Page 29: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

national defense - everyone is protected by the same defense system

dams - everyone in the community is protected from flooding by the dam

Page 30: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

There is an incentive to not reveal your true valuation, since if the good is provided, you are going to get the use of it anyway.

But if everyone refuses to reveal their true value of the good and so refused to voluntarily pay what it is worth, the good will not be provided.

This is where the government is useful. The government tells everybody what to pay and everybody has to do it. Then the government has the money to pay to have the good produced.

Why Public Goods Cause Problems in a Market Economy

Page 31: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

So far, we have discussed two major sectors of the economy.

The first consists of for-profit businesses, and is the largest sector in the U.S. economy.

The second sector is the government.

We will examine now a third sector, which consists of nonprofit organizations.

Page 32: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

The Nonprofit Sector

The term “nonprofit sector” describes institutions and organizations that are neither government nor for-profit businesses.

It is also sometimes called the third sector, the independent sector, the philanthropic sector, or the voluntary sector.

Outside the United States, nonprofits are often called nongovernmental organizations (NGOs).

Page 33: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Nonprofit organizations are not forbidden to generate a profit, but if they make profits, these profits may not be distributed to owners or other private persons.

This nondistribution constraint is imposed on the organizations by the charter under which they are organized under state law.

What does nonprofit mean?

Page 34: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Four Main Types of Nonprofit Organizations

1. Public Benefit Service and Action

2. Member-Serving

3. Religious

4. Funding Intermediaries

Page 35: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Public Benefit Service & Action

The missions of these organizations include providing health care, providing education, promoting the arts, and ensuring civil rights.

While organizations such as animal shelters are in this group, the largest of these organizations are usually hospitals and educational institutions.

Page 36: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Member-Serving

These nonprofits provide benefits to their own members.

Examples: professional organizations (such as the American Medical Association), labor unions, political parties, and social clubs.

Page 37: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Religious

Churches, Synagogues, Mosques, and related organizations.

Page 38: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Funding Intermediaries

These include charitable foundations (such as the Ford Foundation) and funding federations (such as the United Way).

Page 39: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

How large is the nonprofit sector?

This sector includes about 1.6 million organizations, or more than 6% of all organizations of all types (nonprofit, for-profit business, & government) in the U.S.

Page 40: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

We have established that while the market system works well, it is far from perfect. The nonprofit sector represents one of the ways that the U.S. economy attempts to adjust for the imperfections. Winston Churchill once made a statement about democracy. A similar statement can be said about the market system. Churchill said:“Democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried.”

Page 41: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

In a perfect world, no one would be hungry, cold, or homeless.

In addition, all incentives would operate in a fair and equitable manner.

In the real world, that is not the case.

That brings us to the subject of Poverty & Income Inequality

Page 42: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

One way of examining income inequality is by looking at the shares of different quintiles of the population.

For example, what percent of all the income in the U.S. is in the hands of the poorest 20% of the population, and what percent is in the hands of the wealthiest 20%?

Page 43: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Perfect Equality Income Distribution

Percent of Population Percent of Income

“Poorest” 20% 20

Second 20% 20

Third 20% 20

Fourth 20% 20

“Richest” 20% 20

Page 44: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Perfect Equality Cumulative Income Distribution

Percent of Population Percent of Income

Bottom 20% 20

Bottom 40% 40

Bottom 60% 60

Bottom 80% 80

All 100% 100

Page 45: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

A graph of the cumulative income distribution is called the

Lorenz Curve.

Page 46: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Graphing Income Distributions

Proportion of Population

Pro

port

i on

of I

n com

e

1.00

0.80

0.60

0.40

0.20

0

0 0.20 0.40 0. 60 0.80 1.00

Page 47: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Perfect Equality Line

Perfect Equality Line

Proportion of Population

Pro

port

i on

of I

n com

e

1.00

0.80

0.60

0.40

0.20

0

0 0.20 0.40 0. 60 0.80 1.00

Page 48: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

In the hypothetical situation of perfect inequality,

one person has all the income, and everyone else has nothing.

Page 49: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Perfect Inequality

Perfect Inequality

Proportion of Population

Pro

port

i on

of I

n com

e

1.00

0.80

0.60

0.40

0.20

0

0 0.20 0.40 0. 60 0.80 1.00

Page 50: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

U.S. Household Income Distribution in 2011

Percent of Population Percent of Income

Poorest 20% 3.2

Second 20% 8.4

Third 20% 14.3

Fourth 20% 23.0

Richest 20% 51.1

Source: http://www.census.gov/prod/2012pubs/p60-243.pdf

Page 51: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

U.S. Cumulative Household Income Distribution in 2011

Percent of Population Percent of Income

Bottom 20% 3.2

Bottom 40% 11.6

Bottom 60% 25.9

Bottom 80% 48.9

All 100% 100

Source: http://www.census.gov/prod/2012pubs/p60-243.pdf

Page 52: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Lorenz Curve

Lorenz Curve for the U.S. in 2011

Proportion of Population

Pro

port

i on

of I

n com

e

1.00

0.80

0.60

0.40

0.20

0

0 0.20 0.40 0. 60 0.80 1.00

Page 53: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Proportion of Population

Pro

port

i on

of I

n com

e

1.00

0.80

0.60

0.40

0.20

0

0 0.20 0.40 0. 60 0.80 1.00

Lorenz Curve

The greater the extent of income inequality, the further the Lorenz Curve sags from the perfect equality line and the larger is area A.

A

Page 54: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

We can capture the extent of inequality using a single number called the Gini Coefficient or Gini Index.

Page 55: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

The Gini coefficient is the ratio of two areas.

Numerator: area between perfect equality line & Lorenz curve.

Denominator: area of the triangle below the perfect equality line.

Page 56: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Proportion of Population

Pro

port

i on

of I

n com

e

1.00

0.80

0.60

0.40

0.20

0

0 0.20 0.40 0. 60 0.80 1.00

A

Gini Coefficient = A / (A+B)

B

Page 57: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

The greater the extent of income inequality (and the further the Lorenz Curve sags from the perfect equality line), the larger is the Gini Coefficient A/(A+B).

Page 58: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

0 means perfect equality

1 means perfect inequality

The Gini Coefficient is a number between 0 & 1.

Page 59: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

How has the U.S. income distribution changed in the past few decades?

Percent of Population

Percent of Income by Year

1970 1990 2011

Poorest 20% 4.1 3.8 3.2

Second 20% 10.8 9.6 8.4

Third 20% 17.4 15.9 14.3

Fourth 20% 24.5 24.0 23.0

Richest 20% 43.3 46.6 51.1Sources: http://www.census.gov/prod/2008pubs/p60-235.pdf ; http://www.census.gov/prod/2012pubs/p60-243.pdf

The share of the wealthiest group has increased, while the shares of all the other groups have decreased.

Page 60: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Gini Coefficient in the U.S

1970 0.394

1990 0.428

2011 0.477

These figures reflect an increase in income inequality.

Page 61: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Gini Coefficients for Distribution of Family Income

Rank Country Gini Coefficient Date

1 Lesotho 63.2 19952 South Africa 63.1 2005

14 Chile 52.1 200924 Mexico 48.3 200826 China 47.3 201341 United States 45.0 200750 Russia 42.0 201274 Israel 37.6 201275 Japan 37.6 200895 Poland 34.1 200996 Spain 34.0 201198 Ireland 33.9 2010

106 United Kingdom 32.3 2012108 Canada 32.1 2005114 France 30.9 2011119 Australia 30.3 2008129 Germany 27.0 2006130 Finland 26.8 2008135 Norway 25.0 2008141 Sweden 23.0 2005

From: https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2172rank.html .

Notice that countries with the most inequitable income distributions have Gini coefficients in the 60’s while those with the most equitable distributions are in the 20’s. The countries that we tend to consider our peers are generally in the 30’s, which indicates greater equality than the US at 45.0.

Page 62: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Closely related to the concept of income distribution is the notion of poverty.

Page 63: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

What is Poverty?

“Poverty is a lack of those necessities that the custom of the country renders it indecent for … people …to be without.”

--Adam Smith

Page 64: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

History of the Official Poverty Measure

In 1963, the Council of Economic Advisors developed a poverty measure that took into account “minimally adequate food intake.”

That measure was called the poverty threshold.

Page 65: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Poverty thresholds are the dollar amounts used to determine poverty status.

If total family income is less than the threshold appropriate for that family, the family is in poverty.

Each person or family is assigned one out of 48 possible poverty thresholds, which vary according to

Size of the familyAges of the members 

The same thresholds are used throughout the U.S.

The thresholds are updated annually for inflation using the Consumer Price Index.

Source: http://www.census.gov/hhes/poverty/povdef.html#1

Poverty Thresholds

Page 66: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

1963 $3,100

2013 $23,550

Poverty threshold for a family of four

Page 67: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Poverty Patterns

• Poverty rates among Blacks, American Indians, and Hispanics are much higher than among Whites and Asians.

• Poverty among the under-18 population is higher than for other age groups.

• Poverty rates are lower for married-couple households and higher for female householder families.

Page 68: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

U.S. 14.3

Pennsylvania 12.6

Delaware County 9.5

Chester 32.3

Area Poverty Rates 2007-2011 (%)

Page 69: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Other Statistics Comparing Chester to the U.S. as a Whole

Statistics (2007-2011) U. S. Chester

Unemployment (%) 8.7 16.5

Median family income $64,293 $34,856

Population over 25 that has not completed h.s. (%) 14.6 23.5

Child poverty rate (%) 20.0 48.3

Median value of owner-occupied housing

$186,200 $71,700

From: factfinder2.census.gov

Page 70: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Income vs. Wealth

We have talked about income inequality.

Income refers to the flow of money.

When you look at the stock of money that you have accumulated, that is wealth.

Page 71: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

People who have very little income are unable to save anything. So they have no accumulated money, no wealth.

People who have more income are more able to save and invest their money.

So while income in the U.S. is distributed very unequally, wealth is distributed even more unequally.

Page 72: Mixed Economies & Market Failure. All economies must answer 3 questions.  What goods & services should be produced?  How should the goods & services.

Video:Wealth Inequality in America

(about 6 mins)

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/03/06/this-viral-video-is-right-we-need-to-worry-about-wealth-inequality/

Based on: Norton, M.I. & Ariely, D. (2011). Building a Better America - One Wealth Quintile at a Time. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 6, 9–12.