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McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 5 Externalities.

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Presentation on theme: "McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 5 Externalities."— Presentation transcript:

1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 5 Externalities

2 5-2 Externalities  Externality – An activity on one entity that affects the welfare of another entity in a way that is outside the market mechanism.  Externalities cause market price to diverge from social cost, brining about an inefficient allocation of resources.  Externalities cause market price to diverge from social cost, bringing about an inefficient allocation of resources.  Example: Bart’s factory and Lisa’s fishing.

3 5-3 Not Externalities  Not an Externality: An activity on one entity that affects the welfare of another entity in a way that is inside the market mechanism.  Example: Two business competitive industries’ prices.

4 5-4 The Nature of Externalities  Privately-owned versus commonly-owned resources.  Externalities can be produced by consumers as well as firms.  Externalities are reciprocal (mutual) in nature.  Externalities can be positive; e.g. general knowledge.  Public goods can be viewed as a special kind of externality.

5 5-5 The Nature of Externalities-Graphical Analysis Q per year $ MB (Marginal benefit) 0 MD Marginal Damage MPC Marginal private cost MSC = MPC + MD Marginal Social Cost Q1Q1 Q* Actual output Socially efficient output a b c d f e g h

6 5-6 What Pollutants Do Harm?  Empirical Evidence: What is the effect of pollution on health?  What activities produce pollutants?  What is the value of the damage done?  Empirical Evidence: The effect of air pollution on housing values.

7 5-7 Bargaining and the Coase Theorem Q per year $ MB 0 MD MPC MSC = MPC + MD Q1Q1 Q* c d g h

8 5-8 The Coase Theorem  Coase Theorem – Provided that transaction casts are negligible, an efficient solution to an externality problem is achieved as long as someone is assigned property rights, independent of who is assigned those rights. Thus no government intervention is required to deal with externalities.  Coase Theorem indicates that private parties may bargain toward the efficient output if property rights are established. However, bargaining costs must be low and source of the externalities easily identified.

9 5-9 The Coase Theorem  Assumptions necessary for Coase Theorem to work include: The costs to the parties of bargaining are low. The owners of resources can identify the source of damages to their property and legally prevent damages.

10 5-10 Other Private Solutions  Mergers: One business buys another or a third business buys the two.  Social conventions: Certain social conventions can be viewed as attempts to force people to take into account the externalities they generate. “Before you undertake some activity, take into account its external marginal benefit and cost.”

11 5-11 Public Solutions  Tax  A Pigouvian tax is a tax levied on pollution in an amount equal to the marginal social damage at the efficient level. Referred to A. C. Pigou in 1930s.  Such tax gives the producer a private incentive to pollute the efficient amount.

12 5-12 Tax

13 5-13 Key Questions  Why is the government allowed to collect taxes?  How does the government acquire money to operate on a federal, state and local level?  What are the three major types of taxes? How are they different?  What are the principles of a governmental tax system?

14 5-14 Why taxes?  To redistribute wealth  To run the country/government  To build and upkeep infrastructure  To reduce imports  To serve the government’s debt  To stop undesirable habits

15 5-15 Principles of Taxes  Taxes is the biggest revenues for governments.  A government has to lay its tax system on certain bases or principles.

16 5-16 1. Taxes must be equal  This means that people in the same circumstances must pay the same amount.

17 5-17 2. Taxes must be Certain  This means people know in advance what they will have to pay.  Your tax bill does not depend on the government's spending habits for the year. So you do not get a surprise at the end of the year.

18 5-18 3. Taxes must be economical to collect  This means it cannot cost more to collect than it brings in.

19 5-19 4. Taxes must be convenient to collect  Neither the tax office or the tax payer wants hassle collecting the tax.  For example, the tax workers pay called Pay As You Earn (PAYE) is collected by your employer.

20 5-20 Canons of taxation Taxes must follow the principles of: 1. Equity 2. Certainty 3. Convenience 4. Economical to collect

21 5-21 Types of Taxes  regressive tax  progressive tax  proportional tax

22 5-22 Regressive Taxes  Defined as a tax that takes a larger share from higher incomes.  Regressive taxes do not follow the ability to pay principal. That is, people who make more money should pay more taxes.  Sales tax is an example of a regressive tax. Some consumers may pay a higher percentage of tax compared to individuals that earn more money.  Social Security tax is another example of a regressive tax. Residents that make less money will pay a higher percentage of their income toward Social Security.  Regressive tax based on percentage of income is higher in lower income individuals.

23 5-23 Regressive Taxes

24 5-24 Progressive Taxes  Progressive taxes are based on the ability to pay principal.  Taxpayers at higher income levels pay larger proportions of their incomes in taxes than people at lower levels.  Federal income tax is based on a progressive tax.  The more money individuals make the more money they are asked to pay in taxes.

25 5-25 Progressive Taxes

26 5-26 Proportional Taxes  A proportional tax is one that imposes the same percentage rate of taxation on everyone’s income.  Based on the thought, the higher the value, the greater the tax bill.  An example would be a school tax of 2.5% for all residents.  Proportional taxes do follow the ability to pay principal.

27 5-27 Proportional Taxes

28 5-28 Direct or Indirect Tax  PAYE direct tax  VAT Indirect tax What is the difference?  Direct Tax, with this type of tax you have no choice, but to pay. For example; income tax.  Indirect Tax, you only pay this type of tax, if you take a certain action. For example, you buy goods so you pay value added tax (VAT).

29 5-29 VAT Indirect tax  This is tax one pays when they buy goods or services.  The shopkeeper or service provider adds it to the cost of the goods or services.  This is known as a consumer tax in some countries.  In some countries, goods are priced in the shop minus this type of tax, but when the customer comes to the checkout they will be asked for the cost price plus the consumer tax.

30 5-30 How does a shop calculate the amount of VAT it pays?  The shop collects this tax on behalf of the government.  The difference between the amount of VAT the producer, wholesaler or retailer charged the shopkeeper, and the amount the shopkeeper charged the customer, must be paid to the government.  If the amount of VAT paid by the business exceeds the VAT charged by business, the government will repay the excess.  This ensures that VAT is paid by the ultimate customer, not by the business.

31 5-31 A Progressive Tax  This type of tax is devised to collect tax according to one’s wealth.  $200 is a lot of money to some people but not FOR others.  So a Progressive Tax is based on ones ability to pay.

32 5-32 Pay as You Earn (PAYE)  This is the tax that employees pay, based on the amount of their salary.  In many countries, employers have to collect this tax, from their employees pay packet.  Note students are sometimes entitled to get the tax they paid on their summer job back, provided they are not working for the rest of the year.

33 5-33 Dangers of an increase in Taxation  Disincentive effect, choose leisure rather than overtime.  Companies can move elsewhere.  Decrease the spending power and hence reduce jobs.  Rich might live out of the country for a at least half of the year.  Prevent savings for house, emergencies, etc…

34 5-34 Difference in tax avoidance and tax evasion  Tax avoidance is where the taxpayer uses a legitimate loophole (excuse) to avoid paying tax for the government. Like buying an apartment to rent in an area, where the government has given tax concessions to encourage redevelopment.  Tax evasion is where a taxpayer does not pay the tax, they are due to pay.  Evasion is a crime, avoidance is not.

35 5-35 Public Responses to Externalities - Taxes Q per year $ MB 0 MD MPC MSC = MPC + MD Q1Q1 Q* c d (MPC + cd) Pigouvian tax revenues i j

36 5-36 Public Solutions  Subsidy  A subsidy for pollution not produced can induce procedures to pollute at the efficient level.  However, subsidies can lead to too much production, are administratively difficult, and are regarded by some as ethically unappealing.

37 5-37 Public Responses to Externalities - Subsidies Q per year $ MB 0 MD MPC MSC = MPC + MD Q1Q1 Q* c d (MPC + cd) i j g k h f e Pigouvian subsidy

38 5-38 Cap-and-Trade  What Does Cap And Trade Mean?  A regulatory system that is meant to reduce certain kinds of emissions and pollution and to provide companies with a profit incentive to reduce their pollution levels faster than their peers.  Under a cap-and-trade program, a limit (or "cap") on certain types of emissions or pollutions is set, and companies are permitted to sell (or "trade") the unused portion of their limits to other companies that are struggling to comply.

39 5-39 Cap-and-Trade Bart’s pollution reduction Homer’s pollution reduction 507590507590 MC B MC H 25 f = $50 10 a b

40 5-40 Positive Externalities Research per year $ MPB MC MEB MSB = MPB + MEB R*R1R1

41 5-41 A Cautionary Note  Requests for subsidies Resource extracted from taxpayers Market does not always fail


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