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Microeconomics MARKET FAILURES

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Title: Microeconomics MARKET FAILURES


1
Microeconomics MARKET FAILURES
Mónika Kis-Orloczki Assistant lecturer
2
Market failure
  • The invisible hand of the marketplace and
    competition lead profit-seeking producers to
    offer consumers an efficient variety of goods and
    services, which are produced at least cost, and
    in efficient quantities. Efficiency is the
    markets great success, and is the reason market
    economies have been able to improve living
    standards over time. However, there are also
    instances of market failure, in which markets do
    not bring about economic efficiency.
  • market failure Occurs when resources are
    misallocated or allocated inefficiently.
  • Examples
  • Monopoly
  • Externalities,
  • Public goods

3
Externality
  • externality arise when the production or
    consumption of private goods leads to cost or
    benefits to third parties, meaning people or
    businesses who are not party to the transaction.
  • negative externality - an externality that harms
    someone.
  • positive externality an externality that
    benefits other.

4
Cost
  • marginal social cost (MSC) The total cost to
    society of producing an additional unit of a good
    or service. MSC is equal to the sum of the
    marginal costs of producing the product and the
    correctly measured damage costs involved in the
    process of production (marginal social cost
    marginal private cost marginal external cost).
  • Sample activities with external costs
  • Allowing your cell phone to ring in class
  • Driving a vehicle that emits exhaust gas
  • Using river water to remove industrial waste
  • Burning coal to generate electricity

5
Benefit
  • Marginal social benefit is equal to the private
    marginal benefit a good provides plus any
    external benefits it creates. In other words, MSB
    gives the total marginal benefit of the good to
    society as a whole. (Marginal social benefit
    Marginal private benefit Marginal external
    benefit)
  • Sample activities with external benefits
  • Looking your best
  • Getting immunized against disease

6
  • AFree Market Equilibrium
  • CEfficient equilibrium which occurs when all
    costs of production are included.
  • Without intervention, the free market will
    produce too much at too low a price (the market
    does not allocate resources efficiently)
  • To correct this, the government must tax the
    good, and use the money to correct the problem or
    pay those hurt by the negative externality

NEGATIVE EXTERNALITY
MSC
P
SMC
B
l
C
P
l
A
l
Pmkt
DMU
Qefficient
Qmarket
Q
7
A free market equilibrium free maket.
produces less than the efficient equilibrium. If
all benefits are added in, should be at C
(efficient equilibrium). Need a subsidy to
correct (internalize) the externality.
Positive externality
P
Pmkt
Qefficient
Qmarket
8
Internalizing externalities
  • Policies to control pollution or preserve common
    property resources require a government. Five
    approaches have been taken to solving the problem
    of externalities
  • government-imposed taxes and subsidies,
  • private bargaining and negotiation,
  • legal rules and procedures,
  • sale or auctioning of rights to impose
    externalities, and
  • direct government regulation.
  • Taxes, subsidies, legal rules, and public
    auction are all methods of indirect regulation
    designed to induce firms and households to weigh
    the social costs of their actions against their
    benefits.

9
Industrial CO2 Emissions, 2004
10
The government
  • might control pollution directly by restricting
    the amount of pollution that firms may produce
  • emissions standard
  • by taxing them for pollution they create. A
    governmental limit on the amount of air or water
    pollution
  • emissions fee tax on air pollution
  • effluent charge - tax on discharges into the air
  • internalize the externality - to bear the cost of
    the harm that one inflicts on others (or to
    capture the benefit that one provides to others)

11
Reducing Externalities - Kyoto protocol
  • Oftentimes market failures go beyond the
    confines of any single country. In these
    situations, the best solutions often involve
    international cooperation. It is important to
    recognize that many countries governments have
    been responsible for the worlds pollution.
  • Kyoto protocol Reached in Kyoto, Japan, in 1997
  • required most industrialized nations to reduce
    CO2emissions by an average of 5.2 below 1990
    levels by 20082012. To achieve this goal, the
    United States, Europe, and Japan need to curb
    their CO2 emissions by 31, 22, and 35,
    respectively, from the levels that would have
    been attained in the absence of a reduction
    policy.
  • The Bush administration rejected this agreement.
  • The EU and its Member States ratified the
    Protocol in May 2002. Of the two conditions, the
    "55 parties" clause was reached on 23 May 2002
    when Iceland ratified the Protocol. The
    ratification by Russia on 18 November 2004
    satisfied the "55" clause and brought the treaty
    into force 16 February 2005.

12
Public (social) goods
  • A private good is a good or service that can be
    consumed by only one person at a time and only by
    those people who have bought it or own it. A
    private good is both rival and excludable.
  • A public good is a good or service that can be
    consumed simultaneously by everyone and no one
    can be excluded from enjoying its benefits. It is
    both nonrival and nonexcludable.
  • In an unregulated market economy with no
    government, public goods would at best be
    produced in insufficient quantity and at worst
    not produced at all.

13
The characteristics of public goods
  • nonrival in consumption A characteristic of
    public goods One persons enjoyment of the
    benefits of a public good does not interfere with
    anothers consumption of it.
  • nonexcludable A characteristic of most public
    goods Once a good is produced, no one can be
    excluded from enjoying its benefits.

14
The characteristics of public goods
Excludable Non-excludable
Rival Private good (pencil, coke) Merit goods Common property (fish in the sea, space on a public beach)
Nonrival Club goods (concert, tennis club, cable television) Pure public goods (national defence, clean air
  • mixed goods Goods that have characteristics that
    are part public and part private.
  • Common property
  • Club goods
  • merit goods are those goods and services that the
    government feels that people left to themselves
    will under-consume and which therefore ought to
    be subsidised or provided free at the point of
    use. Consumption of merit goods is thought to
    generate positive externality effects  where the
    social benefit from consumption exceeds the
    private benefit. (health services - vaccination,
    education)

15
  • Common property resources are non-excludable, so
    consumers cannot prevented from using them and
    are rival, so one persons use reduces another
    persons ability to benefit from the good.
  • These two characteristics lead to an important
    economic implication Consumers will have an
    incentive to overuse the good. Because its
    rival, if a consumer doesnt use the good, they
    will lose the opportunity to use it.
  • Club goods a subtype of public goods that are
    excludable but non-rival, at least until reaching
    a point where congestion occurs.

16
  • free-rider problem Because people can enjoy the
    benefits of public goods whether they pay for
    them or not, they are usually unwilling to pay
    for them. A free rider is a person who enjoys the
    benefits of a good or service without paying for
    it. Because of the free-rider problem, the market
    would provide too small quantity of a public
    good. To produce the efficient quantity,
    government action is required.
  • Methods reducing free riding
  • social pressure,
  • mergers,
  • compulsion,
  • privatization.
  • drop-in-the-bucket problem The good or service
    is usually so costly that its provision generally
    does not depend on whether or not any single
    person pays.

17
Optimal level of provision for public goods
  • Government has no choice but to produce pure
    public goods itself. For impure public goods, it
    is possible for government to use regulation, or
    price incentives to guide the marketplace towards
    efficiency. Government policy alternatives are of
    three general sorts
  • Government can price the good.
  • Government can produce the good.
  • Government can regulate the good.
  • Governments can impose taxes and licensing fees
    to require those who benefit from public goods to
    pay for them.

18
Optimal provision of public goods
  • The price mechanism forces people to reveal what
    they want, and it forces firms to produce only
    what people are willing to pay for, but it works
    this way only because exclusion is possible.
  • For private goods, market demand is the
    horizontal sum of individual demand curveswe add
    the different quantities that households consume
    (as measured on the horizontal axis).
  • For public goods, market demand is the vertical
    sum of individual demand curveswe add the
    different amounts that households are willing to
    pay to obtain each level of output (as measured
    on the vertical axis).

19
The aggregate demand curve for the public goods
At the optimal level, societys total willingness
to pay per unit is equal to the marginal cost of
producing the good.
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