Unit 6 - Market Failure and the Role of Government Guide
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
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)
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
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
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)
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
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)
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
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
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)