Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp....
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Transcript of Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp....
![Page 1: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Economics 101 – Section 5Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004
Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466Natural monopolies
ExternalitiesPublic goods
![Page 2: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Market failures and public goods A market failure occurs whenever a market which exists free
of any government or other intervention is inefficient Natural Monopolies
Recall that natural monopolies exist when there are economies of scale so that ATC keeps going down as more and more is produced Utilities Extreme example –a Evanescence cd
MC vs ATC The marginal cost is very small (i.e. $0.50) but the fixed costs may be
very large (recording time, promotion, artists time, etc) In the absence of government regulation natural monopolies may
make “unfair” profits by charging prices that are too high
![Page 3: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
# of Evanescence cd’s
Dollars
0.5
2.00
MC
$15
2 million
DMR
3.5million
Monopoly point of production(positive profit)
Production just covering costs (zero profit)
![Page 4: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Figure 4 Regulating a Natural Monopoly
Electricity (kwh per Day)
Dollars
B0.15
0.29
A
C
MC
$0.60
LRATC
5 million
DMR
8.5 million
10 million
Unregulated monopoly
“Fair rate of return”production
Efficient production (requires subsidy)
![Page 5: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Externalities Externalities
is a by-product of an action that affects someone who has not taken part explicitly in that action
Examples Pollution Innocent bystanders close to riots (tear gas) Disruptive behavior in any class that affects those
around you
![Page 6: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Externalities Negative externalities (such as pollution)
A market with a negative externality associated with production or consumption will be inefficient There will be too much consumption of the good
In market equilibrium the actual marginal cost (this includes the social cost) exceeds the marginal benefit
![Page 7: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Figure 5 A Negative Externality
Price per Gallon
Gasoline (Gallons)
1.00 A
S
Qineff
D
Qeff
MSC = S + tax
B1.30
0.80
$1.50
![Page 8: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Externalities A tax equal to the difference between the
marginal social cost and marginal private cost can correct a negative externality and make a market efficient
![Page 9: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
Externalities Positive externalities A market with a positive externality from production
or consumption of a certain good will also be inefficient Too little will be produced
In the market equilibrium the marginal benefits to all parties exceeds the marginal cost
A subsidy equal to the difference between marginal social benefit and marginal private benefit can correct a positive externality and make a market efficient.
![Page 10: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Figure 6 A Positive Externality
Price
Number of Bachelor’s
Degrees
50,000A
S
Q
D
MSB = D + SubsidyB
$65,000
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Public goods A public good
A good which is both non-rival and non-excludable Ex: national defense, parks, air
A private good A good that is rival and excludable
Car, hamburger, newspaper, chair Rival – when one person consumes a good then no one else can
consume that same good at that particular moment in time Hamburger, apartment
Non-rival – when many people can enjoy the same good without affecting anyone else's consumption of that same good
National defense, Leid rec center
![Page 12: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Public goods Excludable
Can prevent others from enjoying that good if they do not pay for it Leid rec center, country club, car, the subway
Non-excludable Cannot prevent others from enjoying that good
National defense, air, parks
![Page 13: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Public goods If there is rivalry in consumption then it
should be provided by the market Free rider
Is someone who does not contribute to paying for an excludable good but gets to enjoy the benefits People who don’t pay taxes free ride on national
defense Visitors from out of town free ride on local parks
![Page 14: Economics 101 – Section 5 Lecture #25 – April 22, 2004 Chapter 15 – Market Failures pp. 453-466 Natural monopolies Externalities Public goods.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022072006/56649f535503460f94c77314/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Public goods The private sector will not provide goods
which are non-excludable These must be provided for by the government Examples – Defense, basic research, most parks
(the ones without a user fee) When a good or service is non-rival, the
market cannot provide it efficiently To achieve efficiency the good should be
provided free of charge
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Public goods
Excludable Non-excludable
Rival Private Good: Mixed good
-The market will provide The good
- The market will not provide enough of the good
Non-rival Mixed good Public Good
- The market will not provide enough of the good
- Market should not provide any of the good
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Public goods Tragedy of the commons
The problem of overuse when a good is rival but non-excludable Overuse of parks Smog in cities – too many people driving or driving
too much Congestion on the web – using up too much
bandwidth Highways
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Public goods Note – Just because a government provides a
good does not necessarily mean that it is public In the US the gov owns
land, some utilities (at least in the past)
In other countries Land, banks, media companies, newspapers, large
corporations