Title: Promoting active learning
18 Government, the Firm and the Market
2Reasons for Government Intervention
- Government intervention and social objectives
- The objective of social efficiency
- marginal social benefits and costs
- MSB gt MSC ? produce (or consume) more
- MSC gt MSB ? produce (or consume) less
- socially efficient output where MSB MSC
- Equity
- concepts of fairness
- Trade-offs between equity and efficiency
3Types of Market Failure
- Externalities
- External costs of production MSC gt MC
4External costs in production
Costs and benefits
O
Quantity
5External costs in production
MSC
MC S
Costs and benefits
D
P
O
Q1
Quantity
6Types of Market Failure
- Externalities
- External costs of production MSC gt MC
- External benefits of production MSC lt MC
7External benefits in production
MC S
Costs and benefits
D
P
O
Q1
Quantity
8External benefits in production
MC S
MSC
Costs and benefits
D
P
O
Quantity
9External costs and benefits in production
MSC
MC S
MSC
MC S
Costs and benefits ()
Costs and benefits ()
D
P
D
P
O
O
Q
Q
Q
Q
2
1
2
1
Quantity
Quantity
(a ) External costs
(b) External benefits
10Types of Market Failure
- Externalities
- External costs of production MSC gt MC
- External benefits of production MSC lt MC
- External costs of consumption MSB lt MB
11Types of Market Failure
- Externalities
- External costs of production MSC gt MC
- External benefits of production MSC lt MC
- External costs of consumption MSB lt MB
- External benefits of consumption MSB gt MB
12Types of Market Failure
- Externalities
- External costs of production MSC gt MC
- External benefits of production MSC lt MC
- External costs of consumption MSB lt MB
- External benefits of consumption MSB gt MB
- Public goods
13Types of Market Failure
- Externalities
- External costs of production MSC gt MC
- External benefits of production MSC lt MC
- External costs of consumption MSB lt MB
- External benefits of consumption MSB gt MB
- Public goods
- non-rivalry
14Types of Market Failure
- Externalities
- External costs of production MSC gt MC
- External benefits of production MSC lt MC
- External costs of consumption MSB lt MB
- External benefits of consumption MSB gt MB
- Public goods
- non-rivalry
- non-excludability and the free-rider problem
15Types of Market Failure
- Market power
- market power can be used to raise the price above
the perfectly competitive level - output below the socially efficient level
- MSB gt MSC
16A monopolist producing less than the social
optimum
O
Q
17A monopolist producing less than the social
optimum
MC MSC
P1
P2 MSB MSC
MC1
AR MSB
MR
O
Q
Q2
Q1
18Types of Market Failure
- Imperfect information
- by consumers
- by firms
- Protecting peoples interests
- dependants
- merit goods
19Business Ethics Corporate Social Responsibility
- Firms and social responsibility
- are managers solely responsible to shareholders?
- are they simply concerned to maximise profits?
- broader social interests
- Business ethics
- a stakeholding society
- corporate social responsibility
- environmental scanning
- Economic performance and social responsibility
20Government Intervention in the Market
- Taxes and subsidies
- to correct externalities
21Using taxes to correct a market distortion
Costs and benefits
O
Quantity
22Using taxes to correct a market distortion
MSC
MC S
Costs and benefits
D
P
O
Q1
Quantity
23Using taxes to correct a market distortion
MSC
MC S
Costs and benefits
P
D
O
Q1
Quantity
24Government Intervention in the Market
- Taxes and subsidies
- to correct externalities
- to correct for monopoly
25Government Intervention in the Market
- Taxes and subsidies
- to correct externalities
- to correct for monopoly
- advantages of taxes and subsidies
- can vary the rate according to the size of the
market distortion
26Government Intervention in the Market
- Taxes and subsidies
- to correct externalities
- to correct for monopoly
- advantages of taxes and subsidies
- can vary the rate according to the size of the
market distortion - disadvantages of taxes and subsidies
- infeasible to use different tax and subsidy rates
- lack of knowledge
27Government Intervention in the Market
- Legislation
- to control activities causing externalities
- to prevent firms giving inaccurate information
- to prevent the abuse of monopoly power
- Regulatory bodies
- purely investigative
- with powers to act (e.g. OFT)
28Environmental Policy
- The environment and production
- Green taxes and subsidies
- use of green taxes around the world
29Types of environmental taxes and charges
30Types of environmental taxes and charges
31Types of environmental taxes and charges
32Types of environmental taxes and charges
33Environmental Policy
- Green taxes and subsidies (cont.)
- choosing the tax rate
- tax rate should equal the marginal external cost
- advantages of taxes and subsidies
- allows market to operate
- can vary with the size of the externality
- disadvantages of taxes and subsidies
- infeasible to use different tax rates
- lack of knowledge on extent of externality
34Environmental Policy
- Laws and regulations
- the command-and-control approach
- advantages
- simple to operate
- safe approach when size of externality not known
- disadvantages
- requires robust monitoring and enforcement
- lack of incentives for firms to do better
- Tradable permits
- how tradable permits work
- assessing tradable permits
35Competition Policy
- Competition, monopoly and the public interest
- the abuse of market power
- higher prices and profits
36Profit maximising under monopoly
Qm
O
Q
37Profit maximising under monopoly
MC
MR
Qm
O
Q
38Competition Policy
- Competition, monopoly and the public interest
- the abuse of market power
- higher prices and profits
- lack of incentive to innovate
39Competition Policy
- Competition, monopoly and the public interest
- the abuse of market power
- higher prices and profits
- lack of incentive to innovate
- market power can also bring benefits
40Competition Policy
- Competition, monopoly and the public interest
- the abuse of market power
- higher prices and profits
- lack of incentive to innovate
- market power can also bring benefits
- economies of scale
41Competition Policy
- Competition, monopoly and the public interest
- the abuse of market power
- higher prices and profits
- lack of incentive to innovate
- market power can also bring benefits
- economies of scale
- investment and innovation
42Competition Policy
- Competition, monopoly and the public interest
- the abuse of market power
- higher prices and profits
- lack of incentive to innovate
- market power can also bring benefits
- economies of scale
- investment and innovation
- approaches to competition policy
43Competition Policy
- Competition, monopoly and the public interest
- the abuse of market power
- higher prices and profits
- lack of incentive to innovate
- market power can also bring benefits
- economies of scale
- investment and innovation
- approaches to competition policy
- banning various activities
44Competition Policy
- Competition, monopoly and the public interest
- the abuse of market power
- higher prices and profits
- lack of incentive to innovate
- market power can also bring benefits
- economies of scale
- investment and innovation
- approaches to competition policy
- banning various activities
- examining each case on its merits
45Competition Policy
- UK competition policy
- the OFT and the Competition Commission
- restrictive practices policy
- legislation under 2002 Enterprise Act
- criminal to engage in cartel arrangements
- price fixing, limiting supply, sharing out
markets, collusive tendering, agreements to pay
low prices to suppliers - OFT has discretion with other types of agreement
- vertical price fixing, agreements to exchange
information - powers of the OFT
- difficulties in rooting out collusion
46Competition Policy
- UK competition policy (cont.)
- monopoly policy
- Chapter 2 prohibition of 1998 Competition Act
- market-share criterion
- market contestability
- anti-competitive practices
- charging excessively high prices, price
discrimination, predatory pricing, vertical
restraints - test do such practices restrict competition?
- merger policy (2002 Enterprise Act)
- role of OFT and Competition Commission
- criteria for judgment
- Assessment of competition policy
47The Regulation of Business
- Regulation and the privatised industries
- nationalisation and privatisation
- Regulation in practice
- use of general competition policy
- specific regulation
- regulatory offices
- price-cap regulation
- the CPIX formula
48The Regulation of Business
- Advantages of UK regulation
- discretionary
- flexible
- incentives
- Disadvantages of UK regulation
- disincentives of changes to X
- complexity of regulation
- principalagent problems between regulator and
industry managers
49The Regulation of Business
- Policies to increase competition
- allowing competition where there is no natural
monopoly - limited extent of true natural monopoly
- allowing access to grids by competitors
- forbidding suppliers from being grid owners
- competitive franchising to make monopolies
contestable - Still need for regulation to prevent abuse of
monopoly power