chapter 9 market failures (perfect competition) Flashcards

1
Q

benefits of perfect competition

A
  1. technological improvement
  2. allocative and productive efficiency
  3. economies of scale (decreases price in long run)
  4. long run equilibrium
  5. max economic surplus
  6. costless system (coordinates self)
  7. economic freedom
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2
Q

technological improvement (benefit of perfect competition)

A

-creates incentive to innovate and develop new technology

improvement = decrease in cost of production =increase in profit = increase supply ( more firms entry market because ease of entry into market is easy) = decrease in price

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3
Q

allocative efficiency

A

p=MC where S=D, cost of using resources weighed against satisfaction of the product, MC measured against marginal utility of consumption

price is most equal to marginal utility
BEST FOR CONSUMERS

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4
Q

productive efficiency

A

P= min AC product produced at lowest cost possible, its most efficient
-most efficient size + output
BEST FOR SOCIETY

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5
Q

long run equilibrium

A

perfectly competitive P=MC= min AC AND MIN LRAC ECONOMIES OF SCALE
THEREFORE total profit will be 0 and they firms will operate at max efficiency

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6
Q

economies of scale - a benefit of perfect competition

A

firm has incentive to increase size to increase profit when total profit is greater than zero, there is an increase in supply, more firms enter or existing firms grow which decreases the price

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7
Q

total surplus

A

-maxed when perfectly competitive
-cs below d above p
-ps below p above s
economic surplus is cs + ps

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8
Q

Market failures (5)

A
  1. income/ wealth inequality
  2. instability
  3. forces of uncompetition
  4. provision of public goods
  5. market ignores externalities
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9
Q

pure public goods

A
non excludable (impossible to exclude non-buyers) 
non rivalrous (one persons consumption does not decrease another's )
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10
Q

private goods

A

excludable, rivalrous

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11
Q

quasi public goods

A

(sorta public) -hospital roads education

  • private goods provided by government
  • they are provided because cost of collecting fees is prohibitive
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12
Q

externalities

A

external costs and benefits from producing a good

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13
Q

external costs

A
costs incurred by the people who dont produce/ consume
water(chemical/biological pollution)
air (co2,nox)
noise
visual
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14
Q

marginal private cost

A

MPC additional cost to producers from increased production THIS IS ALSO THE SUPPLY CURVE (REGULAR ONE) AND IT ALSO =MC

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15
Q

marginal external cost

A

MEC addition cost to society from production ( not on regular supply curve )

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16
Q

marginal social cost

A

MSC addition cost to both producer and society

MPC+MEC= MSC which is the new supply curve

17
Q

MPC

A

marginal private cost

18
Q

MEC

A

marginal external cost

19
Q

MSC

A

marginal social cost

20
Q

solutions to pollution

A
  • command and control - legislation and standards
  • Tax on producer or consumer, tax each unit of pollution
  • market based solutions- CAP AND TRADE PERMITS
21
Q

external benefits

A

benefits incurred by people who don’t produce or consume goods - education/healthcare

22
Q

marginal private benefits

A

MPB- additional benefit to customer from one more unit of consumption MPB= D
so MPC= supply, MPB = D

23
Q

marginal external benefit

A

MEB- addition al benefit to society

24
Q

marginal social benefit

A

MSB =MPB+MEB complete demand curve including all benefits of consumption

25
Q

cap and trade- traceable emission permits

A

demand for permits (right to pollute)- then price = zero will produce a lot of pollution

option 1- issue a fixed number of permits, market will determine price– firms prefer this option, they can just cut down on pollution without paying

option 2-permits sold for a specified amount, the market will determine quantity- there’s an unlimited amount t– government prefers this one because they can make revenue

26
Q

taxes + external cost

A

S= MPC (marginal private cost)
tax puts price on pollution and creates a more socially optimal equilibrium
tax= MEC- marginal external cost

new curve of MEC+ MPC =** MSC marginal social cost of the product
TAX INCREASE PRICE AND DECREASE QUANTITY TRADED

27
Q

subsidy on consumer

A

MPB marginal private benefit original demand curve
MEB– size of subsidy
MSB- marginal social benefit (MPB+MEB)

Increases consumption of a product that has external benefits to society

subsidy decreases price and increases quantity traded

28
Q

subsidy to producer

A

MPC= supplu
MEB- subsidy
MPC + subsidy = new supply curve
increases quantity decreases price