ECO100Y1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Externality, Allocative Efficiency, Social Cost

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There may be an externality in the production of a good [e. g. pollution] or in the consumption of a good [e. g. alcohol] Answers: "too low, the cost of the pollution (toxins) is not reflect in the market price of lumber, no. *externalities may be positive [benefit third parties] or negative [harm third parties] To produce aluminum, firms generate smoke, which adversely affects health and the quality of the environment social cost = private cost + externality cost social benefit = private benefit. Market outcome: p = 25 q = 60 where qd = qs. Competitive market: allocative efficiency (no externalities) : p = mc, if third parties are affected ("externality"), competitive outcome is not allocatively efficient. To be allocatively efficient with production externality: p = social mc. P1 = social mc, q1 = allocatively efficient with production externality. P = private mc, q = allocatively efficient if there were no externalities.

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