ECON 040 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Coase Theorem, Deadweight Loss, Invisible Hand

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Because there is no right or wrong & no government (and no morals i. e. if you have property rights, you can do whatever you like), the coase theorem can be applied here. The coase theorem states that if a trade in an externality is possible and there are no transaction costs, bargaining will lead to an efficient outcome regardless of the initial allocation of property rights. In the perfume example, suppose bill tells sally that he likes the perfume, then they start negotiating. Sally offers to consume 2 extra units (6 instead of 4) of perfume in exchange for bill paying her per each extra unit. Mbprivate-6th unit + transfer(sally) = + = = mc. Bill accepts because the price sally is asking is exactly equal to the external benefit of consuming 2 more units. A negative production externality represents a cost incurred by someone who is not involved in the production of a given good.

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