ECON: Chapter 10: Externalities and Public Good
3 facts about public goods
1. just because the government provides it, doesn't man that it is a public good - Ex: mail delivery 2. just because something is a public good doesn't mean that the government should fund it - Ex: parks 3. just because the government should fund a public good doesn't mean that the government should provide it - Ex: fireworks display
3 steps to analyze externalities
1. predict the equilibrium outcome to forecast what you think will happen 2. assess what externalities are involved 3. figure out what outcome is in society's best interests, and then compare this to the equilibrium forecast from the first step
6 ways to solve external problems by "internalizing the externality"
1. private bargaining 2. fix the price: corrective taxes and subsidies 3. fix the quantity: cap and trade 4. laws, rules, and regulations 5. government provision of public goods 6. assign ownership rights
external benefit:
a benefit accruing to bystanders
external cost:
a cost imposed on the bystanders
nonrival good:
a good for which one person's use doesn't subtract from another's
rival good:
a good for which your use of it comes at someone else's expense
club good:
a good that is excludable but nonrival in consumption - ex: cable TV
common resourse:
a good that is rival and also nonexcluable - ex: fish, town commons
cap and trade:
a quantity regulation implemented by allocating a fixed number of permits, which can then be traded - similar to a corrective tax
externality:
a side effect of an activity that affects bystanders whose interests aren't taken into account
free-rider problem:
a situation that arises when someone can enjoy the benefits of a good without bearing the cost
corrective tax:
a tax designed to induce people to take account of the negative externalities they cause
marginal social benefit:
all marginal benefits, no matter who gets them
marginal external cost:
all marginal costs, no matter who pays them
positive externality:
an activity whose side effects benefit bystanders
negative externality:
an activity whose side effects harm bystanders
on a graph positive externalities
drive a wedge between marginal social benefits and the demand curve
on a graph, negative externalities do what
drive a wedge between the supply curve and the marginal social cost curve the
coase theorem:
if bargaining is costless, property rights are clearly established and enforced, and externality problems can be solved by private bargains
equation for marginal social benefits
marginal social benefits = marginal private benefit + marginal external benefit
equation for marginal social cost
marginal social cost = marginal private cost + marginal social cost
public goods:
nonrival goods afflicted by the free-rider problem - Ex: national security
free-rider problems typically come up when
people cannot be easily excluded from using something
the rational rule for society:
produce more of a product as lone as its marginal social benefit is at least as large as the marginal social cost
marginal private benefit:
the external benefit from one extra unit enjoyed by the buyer
marginal private cost:
the extra cost from one extra unit paid by the seller
marginal external benefit:
the extra external benefit from one extra unit
there is no free-rider problem when
the goods and services are rival because it's easy to exclude someone
socially optimal:
the outcome that is most efficient for society as a whole, including the interests of buyers, sellers, and bystanders
tragedy of the commons:
the tendency to overconsume a common resource
when people don't take account of the marginal external benefits that their choices generate...
they will buy a smaller quantity than is in society's best interest
goods that create positive externalities are often
under produced