Market failures Flashcards

1
Q

Define consumer surplus formula

A

Maximum price consumer is willing to pay - the actual price
- represents the added benefit (because not having to pay much or if consumer surplus is low, they have to pay a lot :( )

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2
Q

Define producer surplus’ formula

A

Total revenue - total cost = producer surplus
- additional benefits (money)

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3
Q

When does market failure occur?

A

when the price mechanisms not optimum — basically when it fails to create a market equilibrium

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4
Q

Why is getting the optimum social surplus impossible?

A

Everyone has their different economics goals and no matter what, someone would be at a disadvantage
-> negative externalities

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5
Q

Why are negative externalities not regarded by producers or consumers

A

Cannot be aligned with economic goal
- negative externalities not quantifiable by profit

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6
Q

Outline the resukts of inefficient allocation of resources

A
  • under-provision of certain goods and services [producers] (e.g. from taxes)
  • over-provision of certain goods (e.g. from subsidies, price floors)
  • under and over consumption of goods
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7
Q

Outline some examples of market failure

A

The under-provision of merit goods such as education and healthcare

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8
Q

Why do private schools and private hospitals not lower their prices

A

To maximize profit

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9
Q

When the gov can’t give the services, who would step up?

A

The producers

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10
Q

When there’s a shortage of labor, who should step up and how?

A

The government
- can incentivize
- making migration more difficult etc

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11
Q

Define private costs

A

costs incurred by the consumption or production of goods and services (main economic agents — producers and consumers)

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12
Q

Define externalities

A

External costs costs or benefits of an economic transaction (selling, buying) that causes the market to fail to achieve the social optimum level of production or consumption
(e.g. fertilizers, air pollution, second-hand smokers etc.)

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13
Q

Define social optimum level of production or consumption

A

MSC = MSB

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14
Q

Differentiate external benefits and external costs

A

External costs AKA negative externalities - adverse impacts to third parties (ie. society)
Internal costs AKA positive externalities - positive impacts to third parties

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15
Q

Define private benefits

A

Advantages enjoyed by an indv or company and/or consumers

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16
Q

Define private costs

A

actual expenses from buying or producing something

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17
Q

Define social benefits

A

social benefits = private benefits + positive externalities
-> benefits to the whole society
-> 3rd party (w/o econ agents): pos ext.;
-> economic agents: private ben.;

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18
Q

Define social costs

A

social costs = private costs + negative externalities
-> costs incurred by the whole society (3rd parties + consuemrs and producers)

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19
Q

Define marginal private benefits (MPB)

A

additional value enjoyed by households and firms
- after production or consumption of additional unit of output

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20
Q

Define marginal social benefits (MSB)

A

total gains enjoyed by households and firms and everyone else
- after production or consumption of additional unit of output

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21
Q

Marginal private cost and margincal social cost (CONT)

A
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22
Q

Describe the social surplus/community surplus

A

X is allocative efficient (equilibrium price = quantity)

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23
Q

Why can positive externalities can cause market failure?

A

When MSC < MSB (??):
-market tends to produce less of a good or service with external benefits than is socially optimal;
- due to individuals do not consider the benefits to society

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24
Q

How can merit goods cause market failure

A

Since merit goods are both rivalrous and excludable,
- merit goods tend to be under-consumed and underproduced due to the irrational nature and imperfect info (they don’t know what is good and bad for them)

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25
Q

Outline the two types of merit goods

A

1.) Rivalrous

2.) Excludable

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26
Q

Define rivalrous merit goods.

A

Consumption of. a merit good reduces the available units to others

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27
Q

Define excludable goods

A

Possible for producers to prevent non payers benefiting from the merit good (private health care, educ, etc.)

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28
Q

Describe this positive externality of consumption graph

A

There are two demand curves — there’s a difference between the MPB and the MSB.

MSB > MPB

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29
Q

How to know if its underconsumed or overconsumed?

A

Look at Qopt (optimum quantity consumed)

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30
Q

Describe this graph/differentiate it from the negative externalities

A

Green triangle = DWL loss due to [in this case] underproduction.

In this case, the difference is between the MPC and MSC (the «S») AND the position of the DWL
- if DWL for neg externalities: base facing right — the DWL of 3rd parties
- if DWL for positive externalities: base facing left — the DWL of producers and consumers

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31
Q

Define negative externalities/external costs

A

expenses with no compensation felt by the third parties not quantifiable by money
- e.g. pollution, littering, climate change, obesity rates

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32
Q

Why are junk foods demerit goods?

A

Can increase obesity rates — its not a necessity

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33
Q

Why is excessive ads bad (neg externality?)

A

Creates visual blight

34
Q

Why do negative externalities lead to MSC > MPC

A

The production and consumption results in greater marginal costs (e.g. obesity)

35
Q

Outline some examples of demerit goods

A

High caffeine, tobacco products, hands-free mobile phones in vehicles (leads to more car accidents)

36
Q

What would happen when there’s no gov intervention

A

Demerit goods are over-produced and over-consumed from society’s POV
- consumers and producers merely concerned with their goals — don’t care about the externalities

37
Q

Why are meats demerit goods?

A

Environmental impacts

38
Q

Describe this graph

A

MPC > MSC

Equilibrium — when MSC and MPC RESPECTIVELY = MPB = MSB

The MPB and MSB curve is aligned

39
Q

How to explain

A
40
Q

Explain this graph

A

1.) Introduction (consumption -> negative externalities)
2.) Give examples
3.) MSB < MPB
(because MSC > MPC?)

Pe = price of the economy currently

Popt = where the economy should be

41
Q

Why is MPB < MSB not the socially optimum point?

A
  • means resources are underutilized;
  • society can benefit from the production of more resources;
    -> (because the costs in the externalities graph are the supply curve)
42
Q

What is Qe?

A

Socially optimum quantity

43
Q

What are the rules when creating an externality diagram?

A

1.) In a production externality, the supply curve splits into two; in a consumption externality, the demand curve splits into two.

2.) Supply reflects costs; demand reflects benefits.

3.) The market equilibrium quantity Qe corresponds to private costs and benefits, MPC and MPB; the social optimum reflects social costs or benefits.

4 .) In a *negative externality *Qe > Qopt**, meaning that the market provides too much of a bad thing; in a positive externality Qm < Qopt, meaning that the market provides too much of a good thing.

44
Q

Steps to draw an externality diagram

A
45
Q

Describe public goods

A

Any good or service not provided by the free market
- non-excludable and non-rivalrous; (more on consumption)
-> all included and no competition — so everyone can have w/o paying
- e.g.: street lights, ligthouses, sports centres, public education,

46
Q

Describe excludable

A

If one person pays for it but one can’t, the one who can’t is excluded from having a certain good and service

47
Q

Define free-rider

A

Those who benefit without contribution

48
Q

What kind of problem do public goods pose?

A

A free-rider problem meaning that is difficult to prevent people who do not pay for the good from consuming it

49
Q

why is IB such an excludable institution

A

Very expensive but it is non-rivalrous (so I guess, depending on the situation, you don’t need to compete to get in)

50
Q

Give examples of the free rider problem

A

e.g.: lazy unemployed people (tax payers pay for their well-being)

51
Q

How will the free-rider problem result to market failure?

A

The under-provision of the goods and services because individuals consume more and benefitting despite not contributing
- under-production OR over-consumption —> tragedy of the commons
- basta the goods and services not enough

52
Q

Define tragedy of the commons

A

Free-riders exploit public goods (e.g. lakes, forests, etc etc) which leads to loss of life/v sustainability.
(- so basically free riders exploit public goods related to the environment, v sustainability)

53
Q

Describe quasi-public goods

A
  • Neither public or private goods
  • non-rivalrous (comme public goods) but excludable (comme private goods)
  • ex: museums that charge an entrance fee (like the one in Roma :’) ), toll booths along the road (like in SLEX)
54
Q

Why are common access resources so easily exploited?

A

Producers will get these common access resourcers or the consumers will keeping using these for their own resources
- results in the tragedy of the commons
- e.g.: forests, rivers, water, valleys, lakes

55
Q

Define common access resources

A

resources which are not owned by anyone, do not have a price and are available for anyone to use without payment

56
Q

Why does the tragedy of the commons happen

A

Difficult and expensive to exclude people from these environmental goods
- (but there are measures such as the name of the “Suicide Forest” in Japan)

57
Q

Tragedy of the Commons vs. the Free Rider Problem

A

Free-rider problem:
- more on the lack of contribution yet still benefiting

Tragedy of the commons:
- Consumers just consuming without thinking about sustainability (environment, resources, others, etc)

58
Q

What is the best answer to the Tragedy of the Commons?

A

Direct provision (because the goods are non-excludable — can’t use price)
- government can ask private firms to produce for them // they contract
- e.g.: PH gov and San Miguel and Villar-owned companies to make roads.

59
Q

Arguments in favour of direct provision of public goods include:

A
  • gen public just receives what the gov provides/ gen public support
  • public goods wouldn’t be available if not for direct provision
  • enables large-scale productions
60
Q

Arguments NOT in favor of direct provision

A
  • The government cost (#deadweightloss)
  • The opportunity cost — gov spending could be used elsewhere
  • potential government failure for intervening in markets (link to key assumption)
    • THEY DON’T KNOW HOW MARKETS WORK T-T (that is why businessmen become politicians) — therefore this point might be void in the future
61
Q

Define bureaucracy

A
  • Making sure that the person accountable for allowing something to happen has a signature
62
Q

How does the government will calculate for the optimal allocation

A
  • using MSB and MSC
  • MSB > MSC —> under allocation of the public good
  • MSC > MSB —> overconsumption (costs do not have to be monetary — can just be like pollution or costs to environment)
63
Q

Define asymmetric information (HL only)

A

When one side has more information than another

64
Q

What would happen if sellers have more information?

A

Can result in a market failure as v demand due to lack of trust (shift to the left)
- affects the truthful sellers as well

65
Q

What would happen when buyers have more info?

A

Market failure..? — Buyers could have more surplus than producers (can pay less)
- e.g.: insurance (buyer can downplay his riskiness)
(also get health insurance as early as possible)

66
Q

Define the economic importance of information

A

Essential for making sensible and rational econ. decisions
-> (if imperfect information -> market inefficiencies -> market failure)

67
Q

Define asymmetric unformation [2]

A

Source of market failure that exists when one econ. agent has more info than the other in an econ. transaction
- incomplete or inaccessible information

68
Q

What does economic theory suggest how we can attain equilibrium information-wise?

A

When there’s perfect knowledge
- (readily available information which is evenly sharedby all economic agents in an econ. transaction)

69
Q

Why does asymmetric information cause market failure?

A

Becayse the party with more info has an unfair advantage over the over -> inefficiencies and a misallocation of resources due to distorted decision-making

70
Q

OUTLINE THE EFFECTS OF ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION

A
  • market failure -> due to distorted decision making
  • two forms of opportunistic behavior: adverse selection and moral hazard
71
Q

Define adverse selection

A

Undesired decisions due to power imbalances caused by asymmetric info

72
Q

Define moral hazard

A

One party engages in risky behavior because they know that the other party bears the economic consequences of their behavior

73
Q

Give an example of the government creating a moral hazard

A

VIa balouts
- send a message to the executives of large corporations that engaging in VERY risky business decisions is ok because they’ll be shouldered by someone else

74
Q

How can government interventions fight asymmetric information

A
  • Via legislation, they can make information legally required to be seen by all parties (e.g. transparency clauses, building regs, legal contracts)
  • Direct provision of information — e.g. nutrition guidances
  • licences can also be used — e.g. due to the licence you must state yayaya.
75
Q

Define legislation

A

laws stipulated by the government.

76
Q

Define provision of information

A

government provides additional information
(e.g. gov television broadcasts)

77
Q

Why is regulation and legislation required to tackle asymmetric info?

A
78
Q

In what instance can the government be considered a moral hazard

A

Gov makes a mistake, taxpayers face consequences as they pay for gov

79
Q

TZo which parties can the gov legislations against asymm info refer to?

A

can be both/either producers and consumers

80
Q

Example of gov legislation against asymm info (consumers)

A

Legal age for drinking etc etc

81
Q

Market power

A

The business’ level of influence over market priuce

82
Q

Define barrier to entry

A

what hinders a business to enter a market