Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Externalities Chapter 10. EXTERNALITIES An externality is the uncompensated impact of one person’s actions on another person –Both positive & negative.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Externalities Chapter 10. EXTERNALITIES An externality is the uncompensated impact of one person’s actions on another person –Both positive & negative."— Presentation transcript:

1 Externalities Chapter 10

2 EXTERNALITIES An externality is the uncompensated impact of one person’s actions on another person –Both positive & negative externalities exist All externalities cause markets to be inefficient –That is, markets do not maximize total surplus (welfare)

3 Negative Externalities –Automobile exhaust –Cigarette smoking –Barking dogs –Loud stereos in an apartment building –Noisy Students –Neighbor’s poorly maintained property

4 Positive Externalties –Immunizations –Restored historic buildings –Research into new technologies –Neighbor’s well maintained property

5 MARKET INEFFICIENCY Negative externalities lead markets to overproduce Positive externalities lead markets to under-produce MC = MB Supply Curve = Marginal Cost Curve Demand Curve = Marginal Benefit Curve

6 Spillover Costs & Benefits Spillover Costs- costs not captured by supply curve (MC) –Costs are understated Spillover Benefits- benefits not captured by demand curve (MB) –Benefits are understated

7 Negative Externality: Pollution Equilibrium MC = MB Quantity of Aluminum 0 Price of Aluminum Demand = MB ( private value ) Supply = MC P ( private cost ) MSC (social cost) Q OPTIMUM Optimum Q MARKET Spillover Cost External social Cost P1P1

8 Positive Externality: Neighbor paints House Quantity 0 Price MB MC Q MARKET External social benefit Equilibrium Optimum Q OPTIMUM Spillover Benefit MSB P1P1

9 Solutions to Externalities Internalizing an externality involves altering incentives Government Methods –Taxes (corrective taxes), Subsidies –Patents –Laws (immunization laws, pollution laws) Free market solution: –Trading pollution credits

10 Worksheet Externalities

11 Taxing Negative Externalities Impose Tax = spillover cost Shifts Supply Curve left Reach social optimal output Total Cost = Total Benefit Total Cost = MSC (MC P + MC S )

12 Subsidizing Positive Externalities Impose Subsidy = spillover benefit Shifts demand curve right Reach social optimal output Total Cost = Total Benefit Fuel Efficient Cars

13 Day #2 Practice Test

14 Factory A Factory B

15 Cap & Trade Analysis D S Goal: to reduce CO 2 emissions Trading System Pollution Credits


Download ppt "Externalities Chapter 10. EXTERNALITIES An externality is the uncompensated impact of one person’s actions on another person –Both positive & negative."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google