Addressing Externalities for Market Efficiency

Lernzettel-Auszug

📌 The Essentials

  • Market failure occurs when resources are not allocated efficiently, often due to externalities or market imperfections.
  • Externalities are costs or benefits not reflected in market prices, leading to overproduction or underproduction.
  • Externalities can be negative (e.g., pollution) or positive (e.g., education).
  • Government interventions like taxes, subsidies, or tradable permits aim to internalize externalities.
  • Private solutions such as bargaining (Coase theorem) and social norms can sometimes resolve externalities.
  • Property rights are essential for internalizing externalities through bargaining.
  • Government failure may occur if policies are poorly designed or implemented.

📖 Key Concepts

Market failure: Situation where market outcomes are inefficient, often due to externalities or imperfect information, leading to suboptimal resource allocation.

Externality: The effect of an activity on a third party not compensated or reflected in market prices; can be positive or negative.

Negative externality: External costs imposed on others, such as pollution, causing overproduction relative to social optimality.

Positive externality: External benefits received by others, like education, leading to underproduction without intervention.

Coase theorem: The proposition that if transaction costs are zero, private bargaining can internalize externalities regardless of property rights distribution, achieving efficiency.

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Quiz-Vorschau

1. Under what conditions can private bargaining solve externality problems according to the Coase theorem?

2. What is a key reason market failure occurs according to the revision sheet?

3. What is the primary reason for market failure related to externalities?

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Karteikarten-Vorschau

What is market failure and what causes it?

Market failure occurs when market outcomes are inefficient due to imperfections and externalities, leading to socially suboptimal resource allocation.

Market failure — definition?

Inefficient resource allocation due to externalities.

How do externalities affect market outcomes and what are the types?

Externalities are impacts of individual or firm actions not reflected in market prices, leading to social costs or benefits. Negative externalities cause overproduction, while positive externalities cause underproduction relative to the social optimum.

Externalities — what?

Costs or benefits not reflected in market prices.

What are common government interventions to correct externalities?

Government interventions include taxes, subsidies, and tradable permits aimed at internalizing externalities and aligning private incentives with social welfare.

Negative externality — example?

Pollution causing overproduction.

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Häufig gestellte Fragen

Was deckt der Lernzettel zu Addressing Externalities for Market Efficiency ab?

Der Lernzettel deckt die wesentlichen Konzepte von Addressing Externalities for Market Efficiency ab. Er ist nach Themen organisiert, um das Lernen und Merken zu erleichtern, mit wichtigen Definitionen, Erklärungen und Zusammenfassungen.

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Wie viele Fragen enthält das Quiz zu Addressing Externalities for Market Efficiency?

Das Quiz enthält 10 Multiple-Choice-Fragen mit detaillierten Korrekturen und Erklärungen zu jeder Antwort. Ideal, um dein Wissen zu testen und Lücken zu identifizieren.

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Wie lernt man Addressing Externalities for Market Efficiency mit Karteikarten?

Revizly bietet 10 interaktive Karteikarten zu Addressing Externalities for Market Efficiency. Jede Karte stellt eine Frage auf der Vorderseite und die Antwort auf der Rückseite dar, was eine aktive und effektive Wiederholung basierend auf verteiltem Lernen ermöglicht.

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