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Market Failures: Public Goods and Externalities

Market Failures: Public Goods and Externalities. 4. Market Failures. Market fails to produce the right amount of the product Resources may be Overallocated Underallocated. LO1. Demand-Side Failures. Impossible to charge consumers what they are willing to pay for the product

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Market Failures: Public Goods and Externalities

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  1. Market Failures: Public Goods and Externalities 4

  2. Market Failures Market fails to produce the right amount of the product Resources may be Overallocated Underallocated LO1

  3. Demand-Side Failures Impossible to charge consumers what they are willing to pay for the product Some can enjoy benefits without paying LO1

  4. Supply-Side Failures Occurs when a firm does not pay the full cost of producing its output External costs of producing the good are not reflected in supply LO1

  5. Efficiently Functioning Markets Demand curve must reflect the consumers, full willingness to pay Supply curve must reflect all the costs of production LO1

  6. Consumer Surplus Difference between what a consumer is willing to pay for a good and what the consumer actually pays Extra benefit from paying less than the maximum price LO2

  7. Consumer Surplus LO2

  8. Consumer Surplus Price (per bag) Quantity (bags) Consumer Surplus Equilibrium Price P1 D Q1 LO2

  9. Producer Surplus Difference between the actual price a producer receives and the minimum price the producer would accept Extra benefit from receiving a higher price LO2

  10. Producer Surplus LO2

  11. Producer Surplus Price (per bag) Quantity (bags) Producer surplus S P1 Equilibrium price Q1 LO2

  12. Efficiency Revisited Price (per bag) Quantity (bags) Consumer surplus S P1 Producer surplus D Q1 LO2

  13. Efficiency Losses a S Efficiency loss from underproduction d b Price (per bag) e D c Q2 Q1 Quantity (bags) LO2

  14. Efficiency Losses a S Efficiency loss from overproduction f b g Price (per bag) D c Q1 Q3 Quantity (bags) LO2

  15. Private Goods Characteristics Produced in the market by firms Offered for sale Characteristics Rivalry Excludability LO3

  16. Public Goods Characteristics Provided by government Offered for free Characteristics Nonrivalry Nonexcludability Free-rider problem LO3

  17. Measuring Demand LO3

  18. Cost-Benefit Analysis Cost Resources diverted from private good production Private goods that will not be produced Benefit The extra satisfaction from the output of more public goods LO3

  19. Cost-Benefit Analysis LO3

  20. Externalities A cost or benefit accruing to a third party external to the transaction Positive externalities Too little is produced Demand-side market failures Negative externalities Too much is produced Supply-side market failures LO4

  21. Externalities P P 0 Q Q Negative Externalities St St y b z a Positive Externalities S Dt x c D D Overallocation Underallocation 0 Qo Qe Qe Qo (a) Negative externalities (b) Positive externalities LO4

  22. Government Intervention Correct negative externalities Direct controls Specific taxes Correct positive externalities Subsidies and government provision LO4

  23. Government Intervention P P 0 0 Q Q Negative Externalities St St b a a S S T c D D Overallocation Qo Qe Qo Qe (a) Negative Externalities (b) Correcting the overallocation of resources via direct controls or via a tax LO4

  24. Government Intervention St St St y Subsidy z S't Positive externalities Dt Dt x Subsidy U D D D Underallocation 0 0 0 Qo Qe Qe Qo Qe Qo (a) Positive externalities (b) Correcting via a subsidy to consumers (c) Correcting via a subsidy to producers LO4

  25. Government Intervention LO4

  26. Society’s Optimal Amounts MC Socially Optimal Amount of Pollution Abatement Society’s Marginal Benefit and Marginal Cost of Pollution Abatement (Dollars) MB 0 Q1 LO5

  27. Government’s Role in the Economy Government can have a role in correcting externalities Officials must correctly identify the existence and cause Has to be done in the context of politics LO5

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