3.8.5 - Merit and Demerit Goods Flashcards
What is a merit good?
A good for which the social benefits of consumption outweigh the private benefits.
Value judgements are involved in deciding that a good is merit.
Why do merit goods differ from public goods?
Public goods are non-excludable and non-rival and therefore, a market will likely fail to provide any of the good.
Merit goods are provided by the market, but are likely underprovided leading to a partial market failure.
What is information failure?
People make wrong decisions because they do not possess or they ignore relevant information.
This is often due to myopia about the future.
What is a social benefit?
The total benefit of an activity, including external benefit as well as private benefit.
As an equation:
Social benefit = Private benefit + external benefit
What are the two most important characteristics of merit goods?
Postitive externalities in consumption
Information failures about the good
What is the link between merit goods and positive externalities?
When a person consumes a merit good, the resulting externalities benefit other people.
i.e. healthy people spread less disease
The social benefit from consumption is greater than the private benefit enjoyed by the healthy person.
What is the link between merit goods and information failure?
The long-term benefits of consuming merit goods outweigh the short-term benefits of consumption.
Individuals tend to take into account short-term benefits due to their time myopia.
An excellent example of this is education, a merit good that some students choose to underconsume as they do not value it at the time.
Draw a under-consumed merit good diagram.
What is a subsidy?
A payment made by a government or other authority, usually to producers, to incentivise increased consumption of a good.
How can a government correct a market failure of under-consumption of a merit good?
- Nationalise the provision of the good
- Subsidise the good to increase consumption up to the socially optimal level.
What is a demerit good?
Goods for which the social costs of consumption exceed the private costs.
Value judgements are involving in deciding if a good is demerit or not.
What is a social cost?
The total cost of an activity, including the external cost as well as the private cost.
Social cost = Private cost + external cost.
What are the two key factors of demerit goods?
- Negative externalities
- Information failures
Why is it important to remember value judgements are vital in considering if a good is merit or demerit?
Each person has a different judgement for some goods, e.g. abortion, contraception, vaccination etc.
Which economists do not believe in merit / demerit goods?
Some free-marketeers.