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Chapter 16 Introduction to welfare economics David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 6th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2000 Power Point presentation.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 16 Introduction to welfare economics David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 6th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2000 Power Point presentation."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 16 Introduction to welfare economics David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 6th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2000 Power Point presentation by Peter Smith

2 16.1 Welfare economics n The branch of economics dealing with normative issues. n Its purpose is not to describe how the economy works n but to assess how well it works.

3 16.2 Equity and efficiency n Horizontal equity – the identical treatment of identical people n Vertical equity – the different treatment of different people in order to reduce the consequences of their innate differences

4 16.3 Pareto efficiency n An allocation is Pareto-efficient for a given set of consumer tastes, resources and technology, if it is impossible to move to another allocation which would make some people better off and nobody worse off.

5 16.4 Perfect competition and Pareto efficiency n If every market in the economy is a perfectly competitive free market, the resulting equilibrium throughout the economy will be Pareto-efficient. n As expressed in Adam Smith’s notion of the Invisible Hand.

6 16.5 Competitive equilibrium and Pareto-efficiency n At any output such as Q 1 *, the last film must yield consumers P 1 * extra utility. n The supply curve for the competitive film industry (SS) is the marginal cost of films. n Away from P 1 *, Q 1 *, there is a divergence between the marginal cost and the marginal benefit derived by consumers n so a move to that position makes society better off. D SS D Q1*Q1* P1*P1* Quantity of films Price of films

7 16.6 Distortions n A distortion exists whenever society’s marginal cost of producing a good does not equal society’s marginal benefit from consuming that good. – Some such distortions may be inevitable – and it may be more efficient to spread such distortion over a wide range of markets, rather than concentrating it in one market – this results from the theory of the second-best

8 16.7 Market failure n … occurs when equilibrium in free unregulated markets will fail to achieve an efficient allocation. n Imperfect competition n Social priorities (e.g. equity) n Externalities n Other missing markets – future goods, risk, information.

9 16.8 Externalities n An externality arises whenever an individual’s production or consumption decision directly affects the production or consumption of others… n other than through market prices á e.g. a chemical firm discharges waste into a lake & ruins the fishing for anglers

10 16.9 A production externality Quantity Price DD Suppose DD represents the demand curve for a product (which we may interpret as marginal social benefit). MPC MPC is the marginal private cost incurred by the firm in producing the good (assumed constant for simplicity). P Q The market clears where MPC=DD at price P and quantity Q.

11 16.10 A production externality Quantity Price DD (MSB) MPC Q MSC If the firm causes pollution, it imposes costs on society, presented by marginal social costs (MSC). Q* So the social optimum is where DD(MSB)=MSC at Q*. The overall welfare loss to society from the market failure is given by the excess of MSC over MPC between Q* and Q.

12 16.11 A consumption externality DD MPC, MSC Quantity Price Q A consumption externality may cause marginal social benefit to diverge from marginal private benefit. If MSB>MPB, then the free market equilibrium provides the quantity Q. MSB Q' As compared with the social optimum at Q', where MSB = MSC. The red area shows the welfare loss. E.g. neighbours may benefit from a well-kept garden.

13 16.12 Greenhouse gases


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