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Market Failure: Market Failure: Causes and Causes and Remedies Remedies Messere Messere – IB Economics (CIA – IB Economics (CIA 4U7) 4U7) Victoria Park C.I. Victoria Park C.I.
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Page 1: PP - Market Failure and Remedies (Nov 09)

Market Failure: Causes and Market Failure: Causes and RemediesRemedies

Messere Messere – IB Economics (CIA – IB Economics (CIA 4U7)4U7)

Victoria Park C.I.Victoria Park C.I.

Page 2: PP - Market Failure and Remedies (Nov 09)

OutlineOutlineI. Market Failure

A. DefinitionB. Causes

II. Market PowerIII. Externalities

A. NegativeB. PositiveC. Calculating the CostD. Allocative EfficiencyE. Correcting Externalities

IV. Public GoodsA. Non-rivalry and Non-excludabilityB. Free Riding

V. Merit and Demerit Goods

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Market FailureMarket Failure

• Market failure occurs when the competitive outcome of free markets is not efficient from the viewpoint of the economy as a whole– This is because the benefits that the market provides

individuals or firms carrying out certain action diverge from the benefits to a society as a whole

– Results in a sub-optimal amount of good/service being provided

• Markets can also fail when firm/individual has insufficient information to recognize returns from undertaking an action

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Causes of Market FailureCauses of Market Failure

• Market dominance and abuse of monopoly power

• Imperfect information

• Externalities causing private and social costs and/or benefits to diverge

• Pure public goods / Merit goods

• Factor immobility

• Equity (fairness) issues. Market can generate an unacceptable distribution of income and social exclusion

Page 5: PP - Market Failure and Remedies (Nov 09)

Market Power (HL)Market Power (HL)

• Imperfect information can lead to resource misallocation eg. firm does not accurately gauge price of key input (oil)

• Monopoly prices above those in competitive markets– Loss of consumer surplus

– Output below competitive equilibrium level

– Loss of allocative & productive efficiency

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Monopoly Power: Good or Bad? (HL)Monopoly Power: Good or Bad? (HL)

• Monopolists may waste scarce resources– High levels of advertising and marketing to increase

brand loyalty and build entry barriers

• Monopoly power can bring economic benefits:– Exploitation of economies of scale– Higher profits used to fund research & development,

leading to faster pace of innovation & gains in dynamic efficiency

– Greater ability to compete internationally as many domestic markets have become more contestable

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ExternalitiesExternalities• Imagine you are in your dorm studying and

suddenly a loud explosion is heard shaking the walls of your room as other students next door play Call of Duty Modern Warfare on-line.

• You complain to your neighbor that “you have an economics exam tomorrow” and they tell you “But I don’t have one tomorrow, so what do I care?”

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ExternalitiesExternalities

• You have just had first hand experience with an externality.

• When we talk about how in individual maximizes utility or a firm maximizes profit, we are implicitly assuming that these decisions do not affect other firms’ profits or other people’s utility.

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ExternalitiesExternalities

• Externalities are the incidental costs (negative externalities) or benefits (positive externalities) that accompany economic activities– Externalities have their effects upon persons

whom the market neither compensates for costs or charges for benefits

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Why Do We Care?Why Do We Care?

• Externalities arise because transactions that occur in the free market don’t always yield socially optimal (or allocatively efficient) outcome– People involved in transaction put their needs first even if they

clash with those of society as a whole

• When a firm or individual makes a decision without taking into consideration how that action affects others, then that decision (though optimal for that individual & productively efficient for that firm) may not be optimal for the whole of society 

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Social CostSocial Cost

• Finding the cost of an externality requires us to compare the total social cost with social benefit.

• The total social cost is the MC of the first unit + MC of the second unit +…

• Marginal social cost (MSC) equals the marginal private cost + the marginal external cost

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Social BenefitSocial Benefit

• We can measure social benefit by looking at the demand curve.

• The demand curve represents what people are willing to pay (hence the dollar value of the benefit).

• Thus, we can also think of the demand curve as the Marginal Benefit curve (MB).

Page 13: PP - Market Failure and Remedies (Nov 09)

Social BenefitSocial Benefit

• To find the total benefit to society of consuming multiple units of a good, we can add up the marginal benefit of each unit consumed.

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Allocative EfficiencyAllocative Efficiency

• Allocative efficiency occurs when firms produce those goods and services most valued by society– This means scarce resources are allocated to the

production of the goods and services so that consumer wants and needs are met in the best way possible

• Allocative efficiency in a given market involves comparing the cost of producing an extra unit - marginal cost (supply curve) - with the benefit gained from its consumption (demand curve) - marginal benefit.

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Allocative Efficiency con’tAllocative Efficiency con’t

• If marginal cost of an extra unit is less than the marginal benefit derived from its consumption (10th unit), then it makes sense to increase production.

• If marginal cost is more than the

marginal satisfaction gained from consumption (30th unit), then it makes sense to reduce production and release resources for alternative, 'better' uses.

Allocative efficiency occurs at

20th unit of output

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Negative Externalities in Production Negative Externalities in Production (MSC > MPC)(MSC > MPC)

Optimal equilibrium for society is where MSC = MSB at Q*

Free market produces at Q1 where MPC = MPB & overproduces good

eg. Firm producing petrochemicals dumps effluent (liquid waste) in a river

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Negative Externalities in Consumption Negative Externalities in Consumption (MPB > MSB)(MPB > MSB)

Optimal equilibrium for society is where MSC = MSB at Q*

Free market produces at Q1 where MPC = MPB & over-provides good

eg. Second hand smoke has external costs in form of discomfort & smell of cigarettes and reduced health (i.e lung cancer)

Page 18: PP - Market Failure and Remedies (Nov 09)

Positive ExternalitiesPositive Externalities

• Externalities do not always have to be a social cost.

• Sometimes an individual’s behavior affects a third party in a positive way

• For instance, if that same dorm pal who was loudly playing Call of Duty MW bakes bread every morning and the smell of bread makes you happy - there is a positive externality

Page 19: PP - Market Failure and Remedies (Nov 09)

Positive ExternalitiesPositive Externalities

• With a positive externality, the social benefit is higher than the private benefit.

• Thus, the privately optimal amount to produce is less than the socially optimal amount to produce.

• There is a loss in net benefit from this underproduction.

Page 20: PP - Market Failure and Remedies (Nov 09)

Positive Externalities in Production Positive Externalities in Production (MSC < MPC)(MSC < MPC)

Optimal equilibrium for society is where MSC = MSB at Q*

Free market produces at Q1 where MPC = MPB & under-produces good

eg. Production of solar panels will benefit society via reduced CO2 emissions / private firms training workers who can then transfer those skills over to rest of society with society benefiting from skilled workers

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Positive Externalities in Positive Externalities in Consumption (MSB>MPB)Consumption (MSB>MPB)

Optimal equilibrium for society is where MSC = MSB at Q*

Free market produces at Q1 where MPC = MPB & under-consumes good

eg. MSB of immunization shots (school age) exceeds private benefits through reduced transmission of diseases and lost work time from illness

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What Can Society Do To Correct What Can Society Do To Correct for an Externality?for an Externality?

• The solution for economists is to internalize the externality - to make the private cost (or benefit) equal to the social cost (or benefit).

• But how to do this is a more difficult problem since it is difficult to calculate & prioritize costs and benefits of activity– How do you assess a firm’s costs of polluting a river?

• Must weigh job security (costs) vs. ability to swim in river (benefits)

Page 23: PP - Market Failure and Remedies (Nov 09)

What Can Society Do To Correct What Can Society Do To Correct for an Externality?for an Externality?

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What Can Society Do To Correct What Can Society Do To Correct for an Externality?for an Externality?

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Property Rights (Coase Theorem)Property Rights (Coase Theorem)

• One way to correct for an externality is to assign property rights

• Coase theorem proposed if:– property rights existed – small number of parties involved– transaction costs lowThen private transactions efficient & no

externalities present since parties take all costs & benefits into account regardless of who has property rights

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Applying Coase Theorem: Assigning Applying Coase Theorem: Assigning Property RightsProperty Rights

• Assigning property rights in the case of loud video game player vs. ‘peaceful atmosphere’ seeking student

You are assigned the right to peace and quiet. If someone wants to play loud music, they have to compensate you to give up that right. This makes your cost part of their cost.

This works the other way as well, though. They could have the right to play music and you have to compensate them not to play. You pay them what it costs you.

• Either way, the socially optimal quantity is produced

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Other SolutionsOther Solutions• Persuasion• Voluntary Agreements (eg. Kyoto protocol)• Subsidies

– Government might subsidize all or part of firm’s costs of implementing pollution control technology

– A subsidy will shift the MPC (S) curve toward MSC curve

• Taxes– If the government knows exactly how much to shift MPS

to correct for the externality, it will tax the production (calculating cost & determining responsible parties difficult)

– A tax will shift the MPC (S) curve to the left

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Public GoodsPublic Goods

• Public Goods are goods that are available for all to consume, regardless of who pays and who does not.

• Example: National Defence (pure public good)• All public goods must exhibit two characteristics:

– Non-rivalry

– Non-excludability

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Non-rivalry and Non-excludabilityNon-rivalry and Non-excludability

• Non-rivalryNon-rivalry means that one person’s consumption of the good does not limit the ability of someone else to consume the good. – Example: A TV Show

• Non-excludabilityNon-excludability means that you can’t keep anyone from consuming the good. – Example: Police Protection

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What is Special about Public What is Special about Public Goods?Goods?

• The problem with public goods is getting people to fund them – market fails to provide for these goods

• Imagine if we expected everyone who wanted national defence to pay for it. You might be tempted to let other people chip in for it and you get the benefit.

• This behavior is called “free riding” and is endemic to the provision of a Public Good

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Free Rider SolutionsFree Rider Solutions

• Often we let the government provide public goods because they can force people to pay for it via taxes

• Find ways to exclude people (scramble TV signals, private police, etc.)

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Merit GoodsMerit Goods• Merit Goods are goods that the government

deems necessary for society because the social benefits exceed the private benefits– Example: health care, education, roads

• Merit goods can be provided by the private &/or public sector

• To encourage increased consumption of merit goods, governments will subsidize consumption (and cause an expansion of demand) in order to reduce the private marginal costs of consumption

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Demerit GoodsDemerit Goods

• De-merit goods are those goods or services that create negative externalities when the product is consumed– This reduces the social benefit of consumption and also

leads to potential market failure through over-consumption.

• eg. cigarettes, alcohol

• Governments may choose to tax or regulate (i.e. gambling) consumption of such goods or in case of illegal goods (i.e. drugs) prohibit use

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Public, Merit & Private GoodsPublic, Merit & Private Goods