1.6: Market failure and externalities Flashcards

1
Q

What are the assumptions of consumer behaviour?

A
  • Agents choose independently
  • Have fixed and stable preferences
  • Agents gather complete information
  • Always make the optimum choice
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2
Q

Why may individuals not act in a rational way?

A
  • Difficult to calculate
  • Hard to calculate utility beforehand
  • Emotion
  • Utility discovered after consumed
  • Brand loyalties
  • Social influences
  • Defaults
  • Altruism vs pure self interest - acts reciprocally instead of pure self interest
  • Lack self control seeks immediate satisfaction
  • Rather not lose than gain
  • Habitual behaviour
  • Social norms
  • Mental preferences
  • Herd behaviour
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3
Q

Why may people pay for a subscription but not use it?

A
  • Inertia - lazy to face decision to cancel or do nothing
  • Opportunity cost of time required to calculate utility so rather do nothing
  • Hard to calculate value as never know when may need it
  • Information gaps - don’t know if need it in future
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4
Q

Why may consumers give to charity?

A
  • Herd effect and peer pressure

- Non monetary benefits

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5
Q

Why may people fail to save for retirement

A

Information gaps - don’t know benefits or value of money in future or how much they need

-Difficult to transfer money from present to future

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6
Q

What is market failure?

A

When the competitive outcome of markets is not efficient as the price mechanism has failed to produce a socially efficient outcome.

  • The resource allocation is sub optimal, producing less social welfare possible than with the available resources
  • Market doesn’t efficient allocate resources
  • Markets are pareto efficient as often impossible to make one better off without making another worse off
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7
Q

What are merit and demerit goods?

A

Merit goods are under consumed when there is a lack of information on their benefits such as education, healthcare and pensions

Demerit goods are overconsumed as there is a lack of information about the negative effects of them such as drugs, fast food, alcohol and gambling

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8
Q

What is an externality? What are the 2 types?

A

Externalities are the spill over effects from production for which no compensation is paid to the third parties affected - neither the buyer nor seller. They are ignored by the price mechanism and so cause market failure if the mechanism does not account for the full social costs.

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9
Q

What are private, external and social costs?

A

Social cost = private cost + external cost

When negative production externalities exist social costs exceed private costs, creating the graph.

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10
Q

Why may the MSC not always be parallel?

A

If the MSC rises with more production it may pivot upwards as there is more social cost with more production.

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11
Q

What is the triangle of welfare loss?

A

A good with negative externalities gives off a marginal external cost indicated by the area between the MSC and MPC, which can then be demonstrated by the area of the triangle of welfare loss

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12
Q

What is social efficient output?

A

At this output there will be less output and higher prices, reducing the production and thus the external cost of production of the good

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13
Q

What are positive externalities?

A

There may be benefits from consumption of goods, giving higher social benefit when consuming at the social cost

Social benefit = private benefit plus external benefit

where positive externalities exist the social benefit therefore exceeds the private benefit

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14
Q

How are positive externalities graphed and what is the equilibrium and triangle of external benefit?

A

MSB>MPB, area between the two is external benefit

At the social efficient level Q2 will be higher and there will be a higher price to consider the external benefits.

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15
Q

What is done to reduce the impact of an externality?

A

The government internalise the externality by implementing a tax, normally indirect, to reduce the supply and demand on these goods and increase the price to meet the MSC, creating a new MPC

This brings it to the social efficient output where technically all costs are paid off or reduced, as there is less output

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16
Q

What areas do consumers/producers pay in an indirect tax?

A

The consumer pays the area between the original price and the price of the new MCP, and lose out on consumer surplus

The producer loses the revenues on the increased prices and output that they could previously supply at, as well as a reduced producer surplus.

The size of the tax is indicated between the difference between the supply and demand curves, and the triangle inbetween is the loss to society

17
Q

What are the advantages of using taxation?

A
  • Corrects market price as MSC covered by price
  • Works through price mechanism
  • Internalises external costs whilst maintaining choice
  • Amount of harm reduced as output and consumption falls
  • Raises tax revenues to address external costs
18
Q

What are the disadvantages of using taxation?

A
  • Expensive to collect and monitor correctly
  • Hard to calculate true social cost
  • Raises costs to firms making less competitive
  • Influences firms to relocate
  • Demand price inelastic so limited effect
  • Illegal markets
  • Firms less to invest in capital and grow, also less in environmentally friendly capital
  • May cause inequality
19
Q

What is done to promote merit goods?

A

Subsidies are grants provided by the state to firms to encourage the production and consumption f a good or service.

Subsidies are granted to the production of merit goods in order to encourage demand and boost outputs, leading to an increase in demand and increased social benefit, as well as a lower price on the equilibrium but a higher quantity, indicated by an outward shift in MSC=MPC curve

20
Q

What indicates the size of subsidy?

A

The area between the original price and new price is the amount the consumer benefits

The producer may not decide to use all of the money for production and may keep some, indicated by the level of MPC above the ew equilibrium and so they may not be willing to fully supply and so keep some above the curve.

21
Q

What are the advantages of subsidies

A
  • Taxpayer pays so benefits
  • Price mechanism simple to understand
  • Benefit increases
  • Reduced cost of production so more competitive
  • Attracts investment from abroad
22
Q

What are the disadvantages of using subsidies?

A
  • Opportunity cost
  • Firms may not pass on cost
  • Hard to calculate true value of benefit
  • May attract too many producers from abroad
  • Demand may be inelastic so effect limited
  • May not affect productivity and efficiency
23
Q

What may be the arguments for and against a sugar tax?

A

For:

  • External costs, market failure
  • Information failure
  • Sugar tax raises revenues
  • Tax encourages manufacturers to offer healthy alternatives

Against:

  • Regressive on low income families
  • Other policies may cut consumption
  • Might switch to other sugary products
  • Risk of jobs lost in shops and pubs who rely on sales
  • Producers may switch to sweeteners