Theme 1: Market Failure Flashcards

1
Q

3 types of market failures

A

Externalities, under provision of public goods and information gaps.

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2
Q

Private benefit

A

the benefit received by the consumer of a good or service

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3
Q

Social benefit

A

Social benefits are private benefits plus external benefits.

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4
Q

Social optimum position

A

MSC = MSB and it is the point of maximum welfare

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5
Q

negative externalities

A

MSC>MPC of supply

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6
Q

deadweight welfare loss

A

The output where social costs > private benefits

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7
Q

positive externalities

A

MSB>MPB

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8
Q

welfare gain

A

the excess of social benefits over costs

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9
Q

How do indirect taxes correct market failure?

A

Reduce the quantity of demerit goods consumed through raising the price of the good or the firm internalises the cost.

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10
Q

How do subsidies correct market failure?

A

Encourage the consumption of merit goods

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11
Q

How does regulation correct market failure?

A

Bans could be enforced for the harmful good and reduce consumption or completely remove consumption. Bans are only useful when MSC > MPB.

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12
Q

How does providing the good directly correct market failure?

A

The government providing public goods corrects the under provision of something in the free market.

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13
Q

How does providing information correct market failure?

A

Consumers can make informed economic decisions.

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14
Q

How do property rights correct market failure?

A

This encourages innovation because entrepreneurs can create new ideas which are protected.

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15
Q

How do personal carbon allowances correct market failure?

A

Firms can pollute up to a certain amount and trade what they do not use.

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16
Q

Non-excludable

A

A characteristics of some goods where it is not possible to exclude someone from using a good.

17
Q

Free rider problem

A

People who do not pay from the good still benefit.

18
Q

Why are public goods underprovided

A

Difficult to measure value consumers get so hard to put price on

19
Q

Features of a private good

A

Rival and excludable

20
Q

quasi-public goods

A

A good or service to which excludability could apply but that has such a large positive externality that government sponsors its production to prevent an under allocation of resources. eg roads

21
Q

symetric information

A

Both consumer and producer have perfect market information.

22
Q

asymetric information

A

Unequal knowledge between consumers and producers.

23
Q

principal-agent problem

A

a problem caused by an agent pursuing his own interests rather than the interests of the principal who hired him