Chapter 10 Externalities
What does a typical graph look like for negative externalities?
Demand and Supply (private value), Supply 2 (social cost = private + external). Optimum equilibrium is smaller than the Market quantity.
which outcome will market produce at: Q market or Q efficient/optimal?
Q market.
Negative externality
adverse impact on someone
positive externality
beneficial impact
external cost
cost falling on people outside of the market
how does a positive externality move on a graph
demand goes down
corrective subsidy
equals external benefit from positive externalities
cap and trade
establish overall limit on pollution, sell permits to pollute the total overall/limit. companies with higher reduction costs can buy more permits
What costs does the market equilibrium (q market) show?
private costs
why might economists prefer taxes over regulations?
regulations requires all companies to adhere to a certain amount. taxes take care of the job more direct and efficiently
how does a negative externality shift on the graph
supply shifts up
corrective taxes
taxes enacted to deal with the effects of negative externalities. ideal corrective taxes equals the external cost from an activity with negative externalities - gives incentive (e.g. if you pollute more than a pack of cigarettes worth of smoke, you pay $50)
Externality
the uncompensated impact of one person's activity impacts the well being of another. Can be positive or negative
social cost
total cost to society of production. Includes private cost plus the cost to bystanders (external cost)