1.3/4: market failure/gov. intervention Flashcards
What us allocative efficiency
When no one can be made better off w/o making someone else worse off (pareto efficiency)
On PPF Curve
What is the indicator of allocative efficiency
market price = marginal cost of supply
What is productive efficiency
when producers minimise wastage of resources; implies best use of factor inputs of production
What is indicative of a productively efficient economy
It is operating at the lowest point on its AC curve
What is dynamic efficiency
concerned with the productive efficiency of a firm over a period of time.
A firm which is dynamically efficient will be reducing its cost curves by implementing new production processes → a reduction in both SRAC and LRAC
What is an X-Inefficiency and draw the graph
When a business uses more inputs than are necessary for a given level of output
What tyically causes an X-Inefficiency ( according Libenstein)
A lack of effective competition in a market allows companies to let their fixed costs of production to rise
What are merit goods
goods which consumers may undervalue but the government believes are ‘good’ for consumers
so would be underprovided in the market
What are demerit goods
goods which are deemed to be socially undesirable and are like to be overconsumed/produced in a free market
e.g. cigarettes, alcohol
What is socially efficient
When marginal social benefit = marginal social cost
Why does the market not provide the social optimum
Ass it doesnt take into account the social costs and benefits all the time
What is market failure
where resources are inefficiently allocated due to imperfections of the market mechanism
What are the 2 forms of market failure and define them
Partial market failure - over/under production of goods
Complete market failure - markets may not exist
What are the 3 types of market failure
- Externalities
- Underprovision of public goods
- Information gaps (assymetric information)
What are externalities
External costs and benefits not accounted for in the private costs and benefits
What is a private cost
cost of an activity to an individual economic unit
What is a social cost
cost of an acitivty to the whole of society; private + external
What is a negtaive externality of production
When social costs are greater than private costs
What is a positive externality of consumption
when social benefits are greater than private benefits
What is a consumption externality
when the social and private benefits differ
What is an externality of consumption
when the social benefits of consumption differ from the private benefits of consumption
What is a production externality
when the social costs of production are different from the private costs of production
At what point is welfare maximised
(private) marginal costs= (private) marginal benefit
Draw a negative production externality diagram and describe the steps
- axis of price and output
- Draw msb=Mpb downward sloping curve
- Draw MSC and MPC; MSC>MPC (MSC inward shift)
- Mark on market optimum (PB=PC) and social optimum (SC=SB)
- From market optimum upwards, draw a dotted line to MSC line
- draw this triangle and label it as the welfare loss
Draw a positive externality of consumption diagram
- Draw axis; price and output
- Draw MSC=MPC upwards sloping curve
- Draw MSB and MPB lines (downwards) separately with MSB>MPB (MSB outward shift)
- Mark on the market + social optimum
- (Again) draw a dotted line upwards from the market optimum to the MSB
- Shade in the triangle and label it potential welfare gain
What are the 2 qualities of a private good
-
rivalrous - consumption by one person results in the good not being avaliable for consumption by another peson
- excludable - once provided, it is possible to prevent other from using it
What are some examples of a negative externality of production
air pollution from factories, industrial waste, methane emissions
What are some positive externality of consumption examples
having a healthy diet, education, exercising
What are the 3 characterisitcs of a (pure) public good
non-rivalry = consumption of the good by one person does not reduce the amount avaliable for consumption by another person (non-diminishability)
non-excludability = once provided, no person can be excluded from benefitting and no person can opt out from recieving the good (non-rejectablity)
marginal cost is 0
What are some examples of public goods
- judiciary/prison service
- police service
- street lighting