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Externalities, Commons and Public Goods

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Title: Externalities, Commons and Public Goods


1
Externalities, Commons and Public Goods
  • Perloff Chapter 18

2
Externalities
  • When a persons well being or a firms production
    capacity is affected directly by anothers
    actions.
  • Negative
  • Chemical plant dumping waste into a lake.
  • Positive
  • A firm installing shrubs and sculpture benefits
    its neighbours

3
Marginal cost with and Externality
  • Marginal Private Cost
  • The additional cost incurred when an additional
    unit of output is produced.
  • Marginal Social Cost
  • The full cost incurred by all of society in
    producing another unit of output.
  • MCsMCpMCg

4
Welfare Effects of Pollution
Social Private Change
CS A ABCD BCD
PSp BCFG FGH H-B-C
Cg CG CDEGH DEH
PSp-Cg BF F-C-D-E -B-C-D-E
CsPSs ABF ABF-E -EDWL
450
Price of paper, p, per ton
s
p
g


MC


MC


MC
A
p
MC
e
s
E
p
282
s
B
D
C
e
p
240
c
c
H
198
p
g
MC
MC
G
F
84
g
MC
30
Demand


Q


105
Q

84
225
0
c
s
Q
, Tons of paper per day
5
Emissions Standard
  • Regulate pollution (or output) in order to
    achieve the social optimum.
  • In the paper example constrain output to 84 units
    per day. Need to know
  • Demand curve
  • Marginal social cost curve
  • Relationship between paper production and
    pollution.
  • Enforcement is costly.

6
Emissions Fee
  • Tax the pollution that is produced.
  • Tax output (assuming a fixed relationship with
    pollution)
  • Either
  • vary tax with output (t(Q))
  • fixed tax (t)

Price of paper, p, per ton
450
s
p


MC


MC


t
(
Q
)
p

MC


t
e
s
p
MC

84
t
g
MC
Demand

Q

84
225
0
s
Q
, Tons of paper per day
7
Cost benefit Analysis
  • Compares the costs and benefits of a movement
    away from the market equilibrium.
  • Costs
  • Reduced output of paper
  • Consumer surplus reduced
  • Producer surplus reduced
  • Benefits
  • Reduced costs of polution

8
CBA of polution
(a) Cost and Benefit
Cost less paper
4,000
Benefit, Cost,
Benefit less gunk
2,000
Maximum
net
benefit
0
84
63
105
Q
, Tons of paper per day
G
, Units of gunk per day
(b) Marginal Cost and Marginal Benefit
MC
105
Marginal benefit,Marginal cost,
84
MB
0
84
105
Q
, Tons of paper per day
G
, Units of gunk per day
9
Externality With Monopoly
450
s
p
g


MC


MC


MC
Price of paper, p, per ton
e
t
330
e
m
310
e
s
p
MC
D
282
C
A
B
e
240
c
g
MC
30
Demand
MR
84
105
225
70
60
0
10
Regulation of a Monopoly with an Externality
  • It may be that the monopoly is preferable to
    competition if regulation is not possible.
  • Charging a tax equal to the MC of pollution may
    reduce welfare if monopoly output is below social
    optimum.
  • Achieving the social optimum may entail
    subsidisation of a monopoly.

11
Property rights
  • An exclusive right to use an asset
  • Private ownership of asset
  • Right to be free of noise pollution
  • Courts could be used to enforce the right
  • You could sell the right to someone who wants to
    be noisy.
  • In many cases the rights are not assigned.

12
Coase Theorem No property Rights
Boat firm Boats rented per day
0 1 2
0
1
2
0
14
15
0
0
0
Chemical firm tonnes dumped per day.
0
10
5
10
10
10
0
2
-3
15
15
15
If property rights are with boat owner Minimum
price per unit of pollution is 5 Maximum price
is 10
If property rights are with chem. firm Minimum
price per unit of pollution is 5 Maximum price
is 7.50
13
Coase theorem Property rights with boat firm
Pollution priced at 7 per tonne
Boat firm Boats rented per day
0 1 2
0
1
2
14
0
15
0
0
0
Chemical firm tonnes dumped per day.
7
17
12
3
3
3
14
16
11
1
1
1
14
Coase theorem property rights with chemical firm
Pollution priced at 6 per tonne
Boat firm Boats rented per day
0 1 2
0
1
2
2
-12
3
12
12
12
Chemical firm tonnes dumped per day.
-6
4
-1
16
16
16
0
2
-3
15
15
15
15
Coase Therorem Summary
  • Assigning property rights results in the
    efficient outcome.
  • Efficiency is achieved regardless of who has the
    property rights.
  • The distribution of welfare in the efficient
    outcome is dependent on the initial allocation of
    property rights.

16
Common Property
  • Unlike private property people cannot be
    excluded.
  • When deciding how much to use, people ignore the
    impacts on others so the resource is overused.
  • Common pool, water, gas, oil.
  • Internet
  • Roads
  • Fisheries

17
Public Goods
  • Non-Excludability
  • People cannot be prevented from consuming a good.
  • Non rivalry
  • The good is not used up when one person uses it.

18
Markets for public goods
  • Only exist for excludable goods.
  • Demand curve is the vertical summation of
    individual willingness-to-pay or demand curves

25
D
Price of guard service, per hour
1
D
18
13
e
e
p
s
10
Supply,
MC
8
7
2
D
3
2
5
7
9
4
0
Guards per hour
19
Free riding
20
Voting for the provision of a public good
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