ECON 200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 18: Rush Hour, Sin Tax, Pigovian Tax

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31 Jan 2018
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Too low a tax and markets remain inefficient; too high and equilibrium quantity becomes too low for the market to become efficient: subsidies can encourage positive externalities, but only when at the right level. Likewise, an uncompensated cost imposed on someone other than the person(s) who caused them is an external cost: the sum total of private and external costs is the social cost. Costs are negative externalities while benefits are positive: the size of an externality may depend on extenuating circumstances. People can help or harm others simply by participating in a group: an example of a negative network externality is congestion that results for many cars on the road during rush hour. Examples include pollution from factories: when negative external costs are accounted for by producers, the efficient quantity of new product produced falls to the point where social cost and market demand intersect.

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