* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download ap microeconomics unit #5 market failure/ role of
Economics of digitization wikipedia , lookup
Marginalism wikipedia , lookup
History of macroeconomic thought wikipedia , lookup
Icarus paradox wikipedia , lookup
Ragnar Nurkse's balanced growth theory wikipedia , lookup
Economic calculation problem wikipedia , lookup
Supply and demand wikipedia , lookup
Public good wikipedia , lookup
AP MICROECONOMICS UNIT #6 MARKET FAILURE/ ROLE OF GOVERNMENT Lecture 6 Public vs. Private Goods “The best things in life are free. . .” ■ Most goods in our economy are allocated in markets… ■ Market Failure: market forces that normally allocate resources are absent when a good is free of charge… ■ Government policy can remedy the market failure and raise economic well-being. CATEGORIES OF GOODS ■ Excludability – Excludability means sellers can exclude people who do not pay for a good from receiving the benefits ■ Rivalry – Rivalry occurs when one person’s use of a good makes it unavailable for another’s consumption Four Types of Goods Rival? Yes Yes No Private Goods Natural Monopolies • Ice-cream cones • Clothing • Congested toll roads • Cable TV • Uncongested toll roads Common Resources Public Goods • Fish in the ocean • The environment • Congested nontoll roads • Tornado siren • National defense • Uncongested nontoll roads Excludable? No Copyright © 2004 South-Western PRIVATE VS. PUBLIC GOODS ■ Private Goods – Rival and Excludable – Examples? ■ Public Goods – Nonrival and Nonexcludable – Create Free-Riders: a person who receives the benefit of a good but avoids paying for it. – Examples? The Free-Rider Problem ■ Why should I pay for something if I can’t be excluded from it? ■ Prevents private markets from supplying public goods. ■ Solving the Free-Rider Problem – The government can decide to provide the public good if the total benefits exceed the costs. – The government can make everyone better off by providing the public good and paying for it with tax revenue. Optimal Amount of Public Goods ■ Achieving MB = MC – Government must “estimate” demand since market is not operating – Demand for a public good is the collective willingness to pay for an additional unit • Determined by adding the prices people are willing to pay for the good – Supply curve is MC, so law of diminishing returns applies Optimal Amount of Public Goods ■ Marginal Cost-Marginal Benefit Analysis – Government should “produce” a good when MB > MC – Take action with maximum net benefit – Economists consider it to be uneconomical or wasteful if the government does not provide when MB > MC Government Allocation ■ Corrects for market failure called externalities – Cost or benefit taken on by an external party – These 3rd party costs or benefits are also called spillovers – Externalities cause markets to be inefficient, and thus fail to maximize total surplus Negative Externalities ■ The intersection of the demand curve and the social-cost curve determines the optimal output level – The socially optimal output level is less than the market equilibrium quantity. – Marginal Social Costs > Marginal Private Costs or MSC > MPC EXTERNALITIES AND MARKET INEFFICIENCY ■ Negative Externalities – – – – Automobile exhaust Cigarette smoking Barking dogs Loud stereos in an apartment building Negative Externality: Pollution and the Social Optimum Price of Aluminum MSC Cost of pollution Supply (MPC) Optimum Equilibrium Demand (MPB = MSB) 0 QOPTIMUM QMARKET Quantity of Aluminum Copyright © 2004 South-Western Positive Externalities ■ When an externality benefits the bystanders, a positive externality exists – The social value of the good exceeds the private value. – Marginal Social Benefit > Marginal Private Benefit or MSB > MPB Positive Externalities ■ The intersection of the supply curve and the social-value curve determines the optimal output level. – The market produces a smaller quantity than is socially desirable. – The social value of the good exceeds the private value of the good. EXTERNALITIES AND MARKET INEFFICIENCY ■ Positive Externalities – Immunizations – Restored historic buildings – Research into new technologies Positive Externality: Education and the Social Optimum Price of Education Supply (MPC = MSC) MSB Demand (MPB) 0 QMARKET QOPTIMUM Quantity of Education Copyright © 2004 South-Western