EC120 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Social Cost, Economic Surplus, Market Failure

10 views4 pages
17 Jan 2018
School
Department
Course
Professor
EC120 Chapter 10: Externalities
- Recall: Markets are usually a good way to organize economy activity.
- In absence of market failures, the competitive market outcome is efficient, maximizes consumer
+ producer surplus.
- One type of market failure:
Eteralit: The uopesated ipat of oe perso’s atios o the ell-being of ta
bystander.
Externalities can be negative or positive, depending on whether impact on bystander is
adverse or beneficial.
- Self-interested buyers and seller neglect the external costs or benefits or their actions, so the
market outcome is not efficient.
- Another principle from Chapter 1:
Governments can sometimes improve market outcomes.
- In presence of externalities, public policy can improve efficiency.
RECAP OF WELFARE ECONOMICS
- Recall, competitive market equilibrium maximizes consumer + producer surplus.
- Supply curve shows private cost.
The costs directly incurred by sellers.
- Demand curve shows private value
The value to buyers (the prices they are willing to pay).
ANALYSIS OF A NEGATIVE EXTERNALITY
- Supply curve shows private cost
- External cost = Value of the negative impact on bystanders.
- Social cost = Private + External cost
INTERNALIZING THE EXTERNALITY
- Internalizing the externality:
Altering incentives so that people take account of the external effects of their actions.
- I our eaple, the $1/gallo ta o sellers akes sellers’ osts = soial osts.
When market participants must pay social costs, market equilibrium = social optimum.
Imposing the tax on buyers would achieve the same outcome, market Q would equal
optimal Q
POSITIVE EXTERNALITIES
- E.g. Flu Shots, Research and Development, University Education => welfare for many people.
- In the presence of a positive externality, the social value of a good includes:
Private value: The direct value to buyers
External benefit: The value of the positive impact on bystanders.
- The socially optimal Q maximizes welfare:
At Q < socially optimal Q: The social value of additional units exceeds their cost
At socially optimal Q < Q: The cost of the last unit exceeds its social value
find more resources at oneclass.com
find more resources at oneclass.com
Unlock document

This preview shows page 1 of the document.
Unlock all 4 pages and 3 million more documents.

Already have an account? Log in
carminegrasshopper545 and 38337 others unlocked
EC120 Full Course Notes
30
EC120 Full Course Notes
Verified Note
30 documents

Document Summary

Recall: markets are usually a good way to organize economy activity. In absence of market failures, the competitive market outcome is efficient, maximizes consumer. One type of market failure: e(cid:454)ter(cid:374)alit(cid:455): the u(cid:374)(cid:272)o(cid:373)pe(cid:374)sated i(cid:373)pa(cid:272)t of o(cid:374)e perso(cid:374)"s a(cid:272)tio(cid:374)s o(cid:374) the (cid:449)ell-being of ta bystander, externalities can be negative or positive, depending on whether impact on bystander is adverse or beneficial. Self-interested buyers and seller neglect the external costs or benefits or their actions, so the market outcome is not efficient. Another principle from chapter 1: governments can sometimes improve market outcomes. In presence of externalities, public policy can improve efficiency. Recall, competitive market equilibrium maximizes consumer + producer surplus. Supply curve shows private cost: the costs directly incurred by sellers. Demand curve shows private value: the value to buyers (the prices they are willing to pay). External cost = value of the negative impact on bystanders.

Get access

Grade+
$40 USD/m
Billed monthly
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
10 Verified Answers
Class+
$30 USD/m
Billed monthly
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
7 Verified Answers

Related Documents

Related Questions