CHAPTER 33 EXTERNALITIES. Consumer externality:  Consumer welfare affected by the actions of other economic agents;  Negative: smoker in the dormitory;

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Upcoming in Class Homework #1 Due Today
Advertisements

PART 10 Market Failures Markets may fail to generate efficient results due to Monopoly Externalities Public Goods Open Access Markets may also have informational.
Chapter 5 EXTERNALITIES
4 THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities.
EXTERNALITIES Chapter 5.
In chapter 10, we look for the answers to these questions:
14. Externalities Varian, Chapter 33.
Externalities.
Chapter 34 Externalities. Externalities An externality is a cost or a benefit imposed upon someone by actions taken by others. The cost or benefit is.
Chapter 34 Externalities Typically, demand only reflects private marginal benefits of consumers and supply private marginal costs of producers. These could.
7.2 Externalities Externalities and Missing Markets 7.2.2Coase Theorem 7.2.3Intervention 7.2.4Summary.
1 Externalities and Public Goods Chapter Chapter Seventeen Overview 1.Motivation 2.Inefficiency of Competition with Externalities 3.Allocation Property.
Intermediate Microeconomic Theory
Chapter 7 General Equilibrium and Market Efficiency
Externalities Consumption Externalities Production Externalities.
4 THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities.
Externalities Chapter 10 Copyright © 2004 by South-Western,a division of Thomson Learning.
© 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien, 2e. Fernando & Yvonn Quijano Prepared by: Chapter 5 Externalities,
Chapter Thirty-Two Externalities.
Externalities, Commons and Public Goods
UNIT IV: GAMES & INFORMATION
When the market works as it should…
Externalities and Public Policy
Chapter Thirty-Four Externalities. u An externality is a cost or a benefit imposed upon someone by actions taken by others. The cost or benefit is thus.
An externality arises when a person engages in an activity that influences the well-being of one or more bystanders with the person engaging in the.
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Environmental Economics.
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Externalities Chapter 10 Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 5 Externalities.
Principles of Micro Chapter 10: Externalities by Tanya Molodtsova, Fall 2005.
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Market Efficiency - Market Failures The “invisible hand” leads self-interested.
Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities. Copyright © 2004 South-Western EXTERNALITIES AND MARKET INEFFICIENCY An externality refers to the uncompensated.
Chapter 10 notes Externalities.
Externalities ECO 230 J.F. O’Connor. Topics Nature of externalities Why do externalities cause market failure Private solutions to an externality problem.
1 Externalities. 2 Externalities  Externalities are a market failure (so Government intervention may be advisable).  Externalities imply that there.
Chapter 2 Externalities and the Environment McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Harcourt Brace & Company Chapter 10 Externalities (Lecture by D. Boldt on 10/18/01 in Econ
Review for Exam 1 Chapters 1 Through 5. Production Possibilities Frontiers and Opportunity Costs Learning Objective 2.1 Production possibilities frontier.
Principles of Microeconomics : Ch.10 Second Canadian Edition Externalities Chapter 10 © 2002 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.
L23 Externalities. Road map 1) Consumers choice 2) Equilibrium, Producers (Pareto efficiency) 3) Market Failures - fixed cost: monopoly and oligopoly.
Chapter 10 Externalities. Objectives 1.) Learn the concepts of external costs and external benefits. 2.) Understand why the presence of externalities.
Lec 21 Chapter Thirty-Four Externalities. When the market works as it should …  Recall: Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” of the marketplace leads self-interested.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western EXTERNALITIES AND MARKET INEFFICIENCY An externality is … –the uncompensated impact of one person’s actions on the well-being.
Modeling Market Failure Chapter 3 © 2004 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
© 2006 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited. All rights reserved.1 Chapter 14: Market Failures and Government Policy Prepared by: Kevin Richter, Douglas College.
Five c h a p t e r © 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien—1 st ed. Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn.
Dr. Laura Dawson Ullrich March 25, Q per year $ MB MD MPC MSC = MPC + MD Q1Q1 Q* Actual output Socially efficient output b a c.
Copyright©2004 South-Western Mod Externalities as Market Failures & the “Fixes”
Chapter 18W McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 5 Externalities: Problems and Solutions © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public Policy, Jonathan Gruber, 2e 1 of 33 Private-Sector Solutions.
PPA 723: Managerial Economics Lecture 18: Externalities The Maxwell School, Syracuse University Professor John Yinger.
CHAPTER 31 PRODUCTION. The Robinson Crusoe Economy One consumer and one firm; The consumer owns the firm; Preference: over leisure and coconuts; Technology:
Market Failure Chapter 14 Externalities. Economic Freedom Economic freedom refers to the degree to which private individuals are able to carry out voluntary.
Externalities as Market Failures & the “Fixes”
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Externalities Chapter 10 Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.
Slide 1Copyright © 2004 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Chapter 16 General Equilibrium and Market Efficiency.
THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Copyright©2004 South-Western Externalities.
Chapter Eighteen Externalities, Open- Access, and Public Goods.
Externalities: Problems and Solutions
The Government and the Market Chapter 13 LIPSEY & CHRYSTAL ECONOMICS 12e.
Externalities. Maximized total benefit Recall: Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” of the marketplace leads self- interested buyers and sellers in a market.
4 THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR. Copyright©2004 South-Western 10 Externalities.
Topics Externalities. The Inefficiency of Competition with Externalities. Regulating Externalities. Market Structure and Externalities. Allocating Property.
THE ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Chapter Thirty-Two Externalities.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
Molly W. Dahl Georgetown University Econ 101 – Spring 2009
Chapter 14 Environmental Economics
EXTERNALITIES ETP Economics 101.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
Chapter 35 Externalities
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 33 EXTERNALITIES

Consumer externality:  Consumer welfare affected by the actions of other economic agents;  Negative: smoker in the dormitory;  Positive: neighbor’s surveillance camera. Producer externality:  Production possibility affected by the actions of other economic agents;  Negative: pollution on farmers;  Positive: hi-tech companies in the Silicon Valley. No market for externality.

Pareto efficiency Pareto efficiency can be achieved by market if  Property rights are well-defined;  Property rights can be traded (unlikely). Example: smokers and nonsmokers  Two goods: air and a composite consumption good;  Two consumers.

Pareto efficiency

Trade always ends up with Pareto efficient allocations; The amount of externality generally depends on the ownership of property rights; Inefficiency arises when property rights cannot be traded.

Quasilinear preferences Quasilinear preferences:  The indifference curves are parallel to each other;  The contract curve is horizontal;  The Pareto efficient amount of externality is independent of the ownership of property rights.

Quasilinear preferences

Coase bargaining With well-defined property rights; One party initiate the bargaining process: a target level of externality, and a transfer; The outcome is always Pareto efficient; With quasilinear preferences, the amount of externality is unque. Similarities: 1 st degree price discrimination.

Coase bargaining

Production externalities Two producers: S and F; Outputs: s and f; Externality: x; Cost functions: c s (s, x), c f (f, x)  Pollution is bad for the fishery, but good for the steel plant.

Production externalities The competitive outcome:  The steel plant has the rights;  No trade or bargaining. The steel plant’s problem:  F.O.C.: The fishery’s problem:  F.O.C.:

Production externalities Pareto optimum: a joint venture by two firms. The new firm’s problem:  F.O.C.:

Production externalities

The competitive firm fails to incorporate the social cost of pollution: too much externalities; The joint venture internalizes externality: Pareto optimal amount of externality.

Cures of externality Pigouvian tax: taxing externality  The steel plant’s problem:  F.O.C.:  The F.O.C. for Pareto optimum:  Set the tax rate at:

Cures of externality The missing market: x is tradable at price q  The fishery sells pollution rights to the steel plant;  The steel plant’s problem: F.O.C.:  The fishery’s problem: F.O.C.:  Pareto optimum:

The tragedy of the commons Cows feeding on a grazing land; Number of cows: c; Marginal cost: a; Total yield: f(c)  Diminishing marginal returns: f>0; f  <0.

The tragedy of the commons Social optimum:  F.O.C.: MP(c * )=a Competitive outcome:  The yield of the each cow: f(c)/c;  Zero-profit condition: AP>MP: Why inefficiency: negative externality on other cows.

The tragedy of the commons