Title: Welfare and government intervention
1Chapter 13
- Welfare and government intervention
2Welfare economics
- The branch of economics dealing with normative
issues. - Its purpose is not to describe how the economy
works - but to assess how well it works.
3Equity and efficiency
- Horizontal equity
- the identical treatment of identical people
- Gender or racial discrimination
- Vertical equity
- the different treatment of different people in
order to reduce the consequences of their innate
differences - Progressive taxation or means testing
4Pareto efficiency
- An allocation is Pareto-efficient for a given set
of consumer tastes, resources and technology, if
it is impossible to move to another allocation
which would make some people better off and
nobody worse off. - Example
- Income redistribution through taxes and social
security benefits - Not Pareto efficient
- Production possibility frontier
- Pareto efficient
5Perfect competition and Pareto efficiency
- If every market in the economy is a perfectly
competitive free market, the resulting
equilibrium throughout the economy will be
Pareto-efficient. - As expressed in Adam Smiths notion of the
Invisible Hand.
6EFFICIENCY UNDER PERFECT COMPETITION
- Achieving social efficiency under perfect
competition - efficiency in consumption MU P
- efficiency in production P MC
- assumption of no externalities
- social efficiency in goods marketsMSB MSC
- social efficiency in factor marketsMSBf MSCf
7The interdependence of goods and factor markets
FIRMS (suppliers of goods and services, demanders
of factor services)
HOUSEHOLDS (demanders of goods and
services, suppliers of factor services)
8The interdependence of goods and factor markets
(1) Consumer demand
9The interdependence of goods and factor markets
(2) Producer supply
Goods
P
D1 MU1 MSBG1
O
Q
(1) Consumer demand
10The interdependence of goods and factor markets
(2) Producer supply
Goods
P
S
D1
O
Q
Goods
(1) Consumer demand
11The interdependence of goods and factor markets
(3) Factor demand
(2) Producer supply
Goods
P
S
P1
D1
O
Q1
Q
Goods
(1) Consumer demand
12The interdependence of goods and factor markets
(3) Factor demand
(2) Producer supply
Goods
P
P
S
P1
D1 MVPF1 MSBF1
D1
O
O
Q1
Q
Q
Factor services
Goods
(1) Consumer demand
(4) Factor supply
13The interdependence of goods and factor markets
(3) Factor demand
(2) Producer supply
Factor services
Goods
P
P
S
S
D2 MU2 MSBG2
PF1
P1
D1
D1
QF1
O
O
Q1
Q
Q
Factor services
Goods
(1) Consumer demand
(4) Factor supply
14The interdependence of goods and factor markets
(3) Factor demand
(2) Producer supply
Factor services
Goods
P
P
S
S
P2
D2 MU2 MSBG2
PF1
P1
D2 MVPF2 MSBF2
D1
D1
O
Q2
QF1
Q1
O
Q
Q
Factor services
Goods
(1) Consumer demand
(4) Factor supply
15SOCIAL EFFICIENCY
- Private efficiency in goods markets
- in consumptionMUX / MUY (MRS) PX / PY
- in productionMCX / MCY (MRT) PX / PY
- Social efficiency in goods markets
- between consumersMRSa MRSb ... MRSn
- between producersMRTg MRTh ... MRTn
- in exchange (assuming no externalities)social
MRS social MRT
16SOCIAL EFFICIENCY
- Social efficiency in factor markets
- in factor demandMPPL / MPPK MSBL / MSBK PL
/ PK - in factor supplyMCL / MCK MSCL/ MSCK PL /
PK - The achievement of general equilibrium
- Pareto optimality
17Social efficiency under perfect competition
Production possibility curve
Good Y
O
Good X
18Social efficiency under perfect competition
Social indifference curves
Good Y
I3
I2
Slope MRT
I1
O
Good X
19Social efficiency under perfect competition
Market price ratio
Good Y
Slope MRS
I3
I2
Slope MRT
I1
O
Good X
20Social efficiency under perfect competition
Good Y
Slope MRS
I3
Slope PX / PY
I2
Slope MRT
I1
O
Good X
21Market failure
- Occurs when equilibrium in free unregulated
markets will fail to achieve an efficient
allocation. - Circumstances
- Imperfect competition
- Social priorities (e.g. equity)
- Externalities
- Other missing markets
- future goods, risk, information.
22A production externality
Suppose DD represents the demand curve for a
product (which we may interpret as
marginal social benefit).
D
Price
MPC is the marginal private cost incurred by the
firm in producing the good (assumed constant
for simplicity).
P
MPC
D
The market clears where MPC DD at price P and
quantity Q.
Q
Quantity
23A production externality
24Solution one property right allocation
- Context
- Air pollution
- MB
- marginal benefit to south country from
polluting activity - MC
- marginal cost to north country on account of
polluting activity - Q
- Optimal extent of activity
- Problem
- Freeriding
MC
MB
Q
25Solution two green taxes
26An example congestion costs
Germany
USA
W Germany
Belgium
Sweden
UK
Cars per thousand population
Spain
Energy and Transport in Figures (EC, 2005)
Federal Highway Administration
http//www.fhwa.dot.gov/ohim/qfvehicles.htm
27Passenger transport in Great Britain (percentage
of passenger kilometres by road)
28Actual and optimum road usage
Costs and benefits ()
MSB
O
Cars per minute
29Actual and optimum road usage
MC (private)
Costs and benefits ()
MSB
O
Cars per minute
30Actual and optimum road usage
MC (private)
Costs and benefits ()
e
a
MSB
O
Cars per minute
31Actual and optimum road usage
MC (private)
Costs and benefits ()
e
a
MSB
O
Q1
Cars per minute
32Actual and optimum road usage
MSC
MC (private)
Costs and benefits ()
d
b
e
a
MSB
O
Q1
Q2
Cars per minute
33Actual and optimum road usage
MSC
MC (private)
Costs and benefits ()
Optimum charge
d
b
e
c
a
MSB
O
Q1
Q2
Cars per minute
34TRAFFIC CONGESTION AND TRANSPORT POLICIES
- Policy 1 direct provision
- the road solution
- public transport
- Policy 2 regulation and legislation
- restricting car access
- bus and cycle lanes
- no entry to side streets
- pedestrian-only areas
- parking restrictions
35TRAFFIC CONGESTION AND TRANSPORT POLICIES
- Policy 3 changing market signals
- extending existing taxes
- road pricing
- variable tolls
- supplementary licences
- electronic road pricing
- area schemes
- variable charging
- subsidising alternative means of transport
36A consumption externality
E.g. neighbours may benefit from a well-kept
garden.
Price
DD(MPB)
Quantity
37Market for public goods
- Individual demand curves D1 D2
- Total demand obtained by vertical summation
- Socially optimal output Q
- Output if good is privately provided Q
- Person 2 will pay for it, and Person 1 will
freeride - P1 gt marginal benefit at Q
- Revelation of preferences
- Voting menu of public good, tax combinations
MC
P1P2
P
D1 D2
P2
P1
D2
D1
Q
Q
38Solutions
- Public provision
- Private subsidies
- Vouchers
39Political economy
- Each consumer has single peaked preferences
- If the ideal amount of tax one wants to pay is
250, then he will always vote for 250 or the
choice that is closest to it - It is evident that the society would get whatever
the median voter wants - Assumption Each person has one vote.
40Political economy
- Issue A
- Only Politician 3 will vote in favour
- Issue B
- Only Politician 2 will vote in favour
- If both issues are voted on simultaneously,
Politicians 2 and 3 will collude to pass it.