ECO100Y1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 13: Influenza Vaccine, Economic Equilibrium, Allocative Efficiency

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Government imposes tax (per tonne), to be paid by sellers. Price (per tonne) quantity demanded quantity supplied quantity supplied (after tax) 70: ss shifts upward to ss", achieve allocative efficiency (at q=50, price=social cost=30) Price received by sellers: market price-10=20 (versus 25) Price paid by buyers: market price=30 (versus 25) Our example: production of aluminum [emission of smoke is the negative externality: social cost > private cost, market underprices aluminum [price reflects only private cost, market overproduces aluminum. Externalities may exist in consumption as well as in production. Positive: flu shot [if less likely to get flu, less likely to spread flu] Too much drinking of alcohol and too much smoking. To achieve allocative efficiency, the government could tax drinkers of alcohol and smokers, and subsidize [negative tax] flu shots. The consumption of alcohol adversely affects third parties [for example, impaired driving and automobile accidents] Note: the production of alcohol generates no externalities.

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