ECON 1050 Chapter Notes - Chapter 16: Social Cost, Cost, Externality

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An externality is the cost or benefit of that arises from production and falls on someone other than the producer, or a cost or benefit that arises from consumption and falls on someone other than the consumer. Negative externality externality that imposes a cost. Positive externality externality that provides a benefit. Four types of externalities: negative production, negative conception, positive production, positive consumption. Congestion pollution and carving a mission are the sources of most costly widespread negative production externalities. Negative consumption externalities - smoking tobacco in a confined space. Positive production externalities - honey farmer placing beehive beside an orange growers orchard. Positive conception externality is getting the flu vaccination to lower chances. A private cost of production is a cost that is born by the producer of a good or service. Marginal private cost is the cost of producing an additional unit of a good or service that is born by its producer.

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