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Unit 6 - Market Failure and the Role of Government Guide

6.1 Socially Efficient and Inefficient Market Outcomes

  • Socially efficiency is when resources are allocated effectively

  • MSB=MSC !!

  • Allocatively Efficient Points

    • Perfectly competitive market : S=D, MB=MC

    • Perfectly competitive firm : P=MC

    • Perfectly competitive labor market : W=MRP (total economic surplus : MSC=MSB)

  • Causes of Market Failure

    • Market power (imperfectly competitive markets)

    • Asymmetric information (lack of info provided by buyers and sellers)

    • Positive and negative externalities

    • Insufficient production of public goods

  • Government policies used to get rid of DWL

    • Taxes

    • Subsidies

    • Reguations

    • Public prodivions

  • Market failure : exists when firms produce @ MPC=MPC, S=D

  • The government tries to get them to produce @ MSC =MSB


6.2: Externalities

  • Externality : when external cost/benefit is placed on members of society who did not pay for them

  • MSB does not equal MSC

  • Negative externality : when someone uses a product, it decreases the benefit of others (ex. smoking), MSC > MPC (correct with per unit tax)

  • Positive externality : when one uses a product, others benefit  (ex. education) MSC < MPC (correct with subsidy)


6.3: Public and Private Goods

  • Rivalrous good : if someone consumers a product, others cannot

    • Rivalrous : food, shoes, etc

    • Nonrivalrous : national defense, fireworks, etc

    • Somewhere in middle : schools, roads, etc

  • Excludable good : non payers can be prevented from enjoying the benefits

    • Excludable : food, school, etc

    • Nonexcludable : national defense, air, etc

  • Public goods : underproduced due to freeloader problem

  • Examples : national defense, law enforcement, etc

  • Freeloader problem : people can enjoy the benefit of a good/service without paying

  • Government will provide subsidies to producers

  • Private goods : goods produced by private markets, can be excludable


6.4: The Effects of Government Intervention in Different Market Structures

  • Causes of inefficient markets

    • Market power

    • Externalities

    • Nonrival and nonexcludable goods (public goods)

  • Forms of government intervention

    • Taxes

    • Subsidies

    • Price floors/ceilings

    • Regulation

  • Per unit subsidy : gives benefits per unit

    • Perfect competition : MC, ATC, AVC decreases, price doesn’t change (price taker)

    • Monopolistic competition : MC, ATC, price decreases (price maker @ MR=MC)

  • Lump sum subsidy : gives benefit no matter how many units

  • Taxes will always shift supply curve to the left in long run, profits decrease

  • Per unit tax : increase MC, ATC, and AVC

    • Perfect competition : MC, ATC, AVC increases, price doesn’t change (price taker)

    • Monopolistic competition : MC, ATC, price increases (price maker @ MR=MC)

  • Lump sum tax : only increase ATC

  • won’t change output level

  • Non price regulation : works like taxes, they ensure competition/environmental protection/health and safety

  • Antitrust policy : promote competition and prevents monopolies

  • Antitrust laws

    • Lawsuits

    • Price controls

    • Subsidies

  • Price ceiling : sets minimum price

    • Perfect competition : causes shortage

    • Monopolistic competition : becomes MR curve, price and output decreases

  • Price floor : sets maximum price

    • Perfect competition : leads to surplus

    • Monopsony : wages go up and workers go up


6.5: Inequality

  • Income distribution : measures % of income that goes to individuals in different percentiles/brackets

  • In a system with perfectly equality : everyone would receive equal shares of income

  • Income : wages, rent, interest, profit

  • Lorenz curve : measures the distribution of income equality  (you want to be as close of possible to the perfect equality line as possible)

  • Gini coefficient : A/(A+B)

    • Closer to 0, more equality

    • Closer to 1, the more inequality

  • Causes of income inequality

    • Supply + demand in labor market

    • Human capital

    • Discrimination

    • Inheritance

    • Bargaining power

    • Etc

  • Policies to address inequality

    • Taxes + transfers

    • Minimum wage laws

    • Anti-poverty program

    • Income protection program

    • Scholarships

  • Taxes :

    • Proportional : everyone pays the same percentage of their income (no impact on income distribution)

    • Progressive : taxes are higher % on people earning a higher income (reduces income inequality)

    • Regressive : taxes are lower % on people earning a higher income (increases income inequality)

Unit 6 - Market Failure and the Role of Government Guide

6.1 Socially Efficient and Inefficient Market Outcomes

  • Socially efficiency is when resources are allocated effectively

  • MSB=MSC !!

  • Allocatively Efficient Points

    • Perfectly competitive market : S=D, MB=MC

    • Perfectly competitive firm : P=MC

    • Perfectly competitive labor market : W=MRP (total economic surplus : MSC=MSB)

  • Causes of Market Failure

    • Market power (imperfectly competitive markets)

    • Asymmetric information (lack of info provided by buyers and sellers)

    • Positive and negative externalities

    • Insufficient production of public goods

  • Government policies used to get rid of DWL

    • Taxes

    • Subsidies

    • Reguations

    • Public prodivions

  • Market failure : exists when firms produce @ MPC=MPC, S=D

  • The government tries to get them to produce @ MSC =MSB


6.2: Externalities

  • Externality : when external cost/benefit is placed on members of society who did not pay for them

  • MSB does not equal MSC

  • Negative externality : when someone uses a product, it decreases the benefit of others (ex. smoking), MSC > MPC (correct with per unit tax)

  • Positive externality : when one uses a product, others benefit  (ex. education) MSC < MPC (correct with subsidy)


6.3: Public and Private Goods

  • Rivalrous good : if someone consumers a product, others cannot

    • Rivalrous : food, shoes, etc

    • Nonrivalrous : national defense, fireworks, etc

    • Somewhere in middle : schools, roads, etc

  • Excludable good : non payers can be prevented from enjoying the benefits

    • Excludable : food, school, etc

    • Nonexcludable : national defense, air, etc

  • Public goods : underproduced due to freeloader problem

  • Examples : national defense, law enforcement, etc

  • Freeloader problem : people can enjoy the benefit of a good/service without paying

  • Government will provide subsidies to producers

  • Private goods : goods produced by private markets, can be excludable


6.4: The Effects of Government Intervention in Different Market Structures

  • Causes of inefficient markets

    • Market power

    • Externalities

    • Nonrival and nonexcludable goods (public goods)

  • Forms of government intervention

    • Taxes

    • Subsidies

    • Price floors/ceilings

    • Regulation

  • Per unit subsidy : gives benefits per unit

    • Perfect competition : MC, ATC, AVC decreases, price doesn’t change (price taker)

    • Monopolistic competition : MC, ATC, price decreases (price maker @ MR=MC)

  • Lump sum subsidy : gives benefit no matter how many units

  • Taxes will always shift supply curve to the left in long run, profits decrease

  • Per unit tax : increase MC, ATC, and AVC

    • Perfect competition : MC, ATC, AVC increases, price doesn’t change (price taker)

    • Monopolistic competition : MC, ATC, price increases (price maker @ MR=MC)

  • Lump sum tax : only increase ATC

  • won’t change output level

  • Non price regulation : works like taxes, they ensure competition/environmental protection/health and safety

  • Antitrust policy : promote competition and prevents monopolies

  • Antitrust laws

    • Lawsuits

    • Price controls

    • Subsidies

  • Price ceiling : sets minimum price

    • Perfect competition : causes shortage

    • Monopolistic competition : becomes MR curve, price and output decreases

  • Price floor : sets maximum price

    • Perfect competition : leads to surplus

    • Monopsony : wages go up and workers go up


6.5: Inequality

  • Income distribution : measures % of income that goes to individuals in different percentiles/brackets

  • In a system with perfectly equality : everyone would receive equal shares of income

  • Income : wages, rent, interest, profit

  • Lorenz curve : measures the distribution of income equality  (you want to be as close of possible to the perfect equality line as possible)

  • Gini coefficient : A/(A+B)

    • Closer to 0, more equality

    • Closer to 1, the more inequality

  • Causes of income inequality

    • Supply + demand in labor market

    • Human capital

    • Discrimination

    • Inheritance

    • Bargaining power

    • Etc

  • Policies to address inequality

    • Taxes + transfers

    • Minimum wage laws

    • Anti-poverty program

    • Income protection program

    • Scholarships

  • Taxes :

    • Proportional : everyone pays the same percentage of their income (no impact on income distribution)

    • Progressive : taxes are higher % on people earning a higher income (reduces income inequality)

    • Regressive : taxes are lower % on people earning a higher income (increases income inequality)

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