MGEA02H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 24: European Union Emission Trading Scheme, Free Rider Problem, Building Insulation

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MGEA02H3 Full Course Notes
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MGEA02H3 Full Course Notes
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Positive and negative externalities (also called external benefits and external costs) Actions that affect others (not just the direct consumer and producer) Providing public art, open space in the city. Burning fossil fuels creating pollution (e. g. , greenhouse gas emissions) When there are external effects (i. e. , positive and negative externalities), markets do not receive the right signals about all the benefits and all the costs, and therefore make the wrong decisions. Consumers and producers do not face the correct incentives. They will consume and/or produce too much or too little of the good. When small numbers of people are affected, private negotiations can solve the problem (the coase theorem) When large numbers of people are affected, this is a form of market failure. Market for gasoline (mpc + mec = msc) On the next graph (see course handbook for algebraic example) What is the net benefit (gts) of producing.

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