ECON 2010 Lecture 15: Market Failure

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13 Oct 2015
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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Sometimes the market system fails to produce efficient outcomes because of side effects called externalities. Externality: an unintended physical effect from consumption or production that spills over onto those who are not consuming or producing the good ( third-party effects ) Positive externality occurs when good physical effects spill over to an outside party who is not involved in producing or consuming the good (e. g. education) Negative externality occurs when bad physical effects spill over to an outside party who is not involved in producing or consuming the good (e. g. pollution) The classic example of a negative externality is the air used by an air-polluting factory. The polluted air spills over to outside parties. Such damages are real costs of an activity, but, unlike the other resources the firm uses in production, no one owns the air, so the firm does not have to pay for its use (a missing market )

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