5: Market failure (lack of public goods) Flashcards
Define a private good:
A private good has two characteristics: it must be rivalrous and excludable. Rivalrous means its consumption by one person reduces its availability for someone else, for example, your computer. Excludable means it is possible to exclude people from using the good, for example by charging a price for the good.
Define a public good:
A public good has the two following characteristics: it must be non-rivalrous and non-excludable. Non-rivalrous means its consumption by one person does not reduce consumption by someone else. Non-excludable means it is not possible to exclude someone from using the good.
Example of a public good?
A lighthouse as it is non-rivalrous and non-excludable.
How do public goods indicate market failure?
Public goods illustrate the free rider problem, occurring when people can enjoy the use of a good without paying for it. The free rider problem arises from non-excludability: people cannot be excluded from using the good. This means firms do not produce these goods, and the market fails to allocate resources to their production.
What are quasi-public goods? Examples?
Goods that do not fit neatly into the category of private goods or public goods. These goods are non rivalrous and excludable. For example, museums that charge an entrance fee and toll roads. They are excludable because pay is required.
What are the implications of direct government provisions in the case of public goods?
The government must make choices on what public goods to produce and each choice has an opportunity cost in terms of other goods and services that are foregone. They must use cost-benefit analysis, and compare the benefit to society of a good to its costs.
However surveys are difficult as people who really want something are likely to exaggerate its value.
What is a common access resource? Examples?
Resources that are not owned by anyone, do not have a price and are available for anyone to use without payment. Examples include clean air, lakes, rivers.
Why are common access resources a source of market failure? Example?
The rivalry and non-excludability characteristics of common access resources pose serious threats to the environment. Producers and consumers are likely to use them abundantly and often overuse them because they have no price. Factories might use rivers for waste disposal, or the air, leading to an ‘overuse’ of the ozone layer. Or fish may be overfished.
Define sustainability?
Sustainability refers to maintaining the ability of the environment and the economy to continue to produce and satisfy the wants and needs of future generations.
What is sustainable resource?
Resources are used at a rate that allows them to reproduce themselves, so that they do not become degraded or depleted.
What is pollution of affluence and what is pollution of poverty?
The threat to sustainability lies in the increased scale of economic activities around the world, which may be due to economic growth based on the use of fossil fuels, or may be due to the increasing numbers of very poor people who engage in environmentally destructive activities in an effort to survive.
Why are government responses to threats to sustainability limited?
The problems of sustainability are often global in nature, rather than just regional or national, and the lack of ownership of common access resources, such as oceans, mean that effective responses require international cooperation.
What is asymmetric information?
Examples?
Asymmetric information refers to situations where buyers and sellers do not have equal access to information, and usually results in an under-allocation of resources to the production of goods or services.
For example, in a free unregulated market, sellers of food could sell products that are unsafe for human consumption.
Indicate possible government responses to asymmetric information:
- Regulation - laws ensuring quality standards and safety features for goods such as goods, medications, private schools and construction.
- Provision of information - governments can supply consumers directly with information, or force producers to provide information, such as crime rates in a neighbourhood.
- Licensure - In the case of doctors, most countries have laws requiring doctors to be licensed.
Evaluate possible government responses to asymmetric information:
- Regulation - legislation and regulation are time consuming, which can slow economic activities. Medications for example can take around ten years before their safety is certified, and is a very costly process. This decreases incentive. Monitoring is also difficult,
- Provision of information - The government has to collect information but it may not be accurate and complete. In addition the acquiring of information is difficult.
In some professions it is impossible to eliminate all asymmetric information given that in some areas such as health and law, doctors and lawyers have specialised, technical information about their clients that the clients do not possess. They can selectively reveal information to demand more services than are necessary. This is called supplier induced demand. - Licensure may limit the supply of people in a profession as it becomes more difficult and time consuming. In addition it may raise the price of their services, meaning some may be unable to pay for a dentist for example.