1 Civil Systems Planning Benefit/Cost Analysis Chapter 4 Scott Matthews Courses: and Lecture 6 - 9/20/2004
and Types of Costs zPrivate - paid by consumers zSocial - paid by all of society zOpportunity - cost of foregone options zFixed - do not vary with usage zVariable - vary directly with usage zExternal - imposed by users on non-users ye.g. traffic, pollution, health risks yPrivate decisions usually ignore external
and Allocative Efficiency Allocative efficiency occurs when MC = MB (or S = D) Equilibrium is max social surplus - prove by considering Q1,Q2 Q* P* S D = MB = MC Q1Q1 Q2Q2 a b Price Quantity Is the market equilibrium Pareto efficient? Yes - if increase CS, decrease PS and vice versa.
and Monopoly Analysis MR D MC Qc Pc In perfect competition, Equilibrium was at (Pc,Qc) - where S=D. But a monopolist has a Function of MR that Does not equal Demand So where does he supply?
and Monopoly Analysis (cont.) MR D MC Qc Pc Monopolist supplies where MR=MC for quantity to max. profits (at Qm) But at Qm, consumers are willing to pay Pm! What is social surplus, Is it maximized? Qm Pm
and Monopoly Analysis (cont.) MR D MC Qc Pc What is social surplus? Orange = CS Yellow = PS (bigger!) Grey = DWL (from not Producing at Pc,Qc) thus Soc. Surplus is not maximized Breaking monopoly Would transfer DWL to Social Surplus Qm Pm
and Natural Monopoly Fixed costs very large relative to variable costs Ex: public utilities (gas, power, water) Average costs high at low output AC usually higher than MC One firm can provide good or service cheaper than 2+ firms In this case, government allows monopoly but usually regulates it
and Natural Monopoly MR D Q* P* Faced with these curves Normal monop would Produce at Qm and Charge Pm. We would have same Social surplus. But natural monopolies Are regulated. What are options? Qm Pm MC AC a b c d e
and Natural Monopoly MR D Q* P* Forcing the price P* Means that the social surplus is increased. DWL decreases from abc to dec Society gains adeb Qm Pm MC AC a b c d e Q0
and Monopoly Other options - set P = MC But then the firm loses money Subsidies needed to keep in business Give away good for free (e.g. road) Free rider problems Also new deadweight loss from cost exceeding WTP
and Pollution (Air or Water) Q P Q# P# S*: marginal Private costs D S#:marginal Social costs P* Q* Typically supply (MC) only private, not social costs. Social costs higher for each quantity What do these curves, Equilibrium points tell us?
and What is WTP by society to avoid? Q P Q# P# S*: marginal Private costs D S#:marginal Social costs P* Q* Typically supply (MC) only private, not social costs. Social costs higher for each quantity
and What is WTP by society to avoid? Q P Q# P# S*: marginal Private costs D S#:marginal Social costs P* Q* Differences in cost functions represent the alternative ‘valuations’ of the product - Thus difference between them WTP to avoid costs
and Pollution (Air or Water) Q P Q# P# S*: marginal Private costs D S#:marginal Social costs P* Q* Relatively too much gets produced, At too low of a cost - how to Reduce externality effects? DWL
and Pollution (Air or Water) Q P Q# P# S*: marginal Private costs D S#:marginal Social costs P* Q* Government can charge a tax ‘t’ on Each unit, where t = distance between What are CS, PS, NSB? t
and Pollution (Air or Water) Q P Q# P# S*: marginal Private costs D S#:marginal Social costs P* Q* CS = (loss) A+B PS=(loss) E+F t P# - t AB E F
and Pollution (Air or Water) Q P Q# P# S*: marginal Private costs D S#:marginal Social costs P* Q* Third parties: (gain) B+C+F (avoided quantity between S curves) Govt revenue: A+E Total: gain of C t P# - t B F C A E C is reduced DWL of pollution eliminated by tax** **This cannot be a perfect reduction in practice - need to consider administrative costs of program
and Distorted Market - Vouchers Example: rodent control vouchers Give residents vouchers worth $v of cost Producers subtract $v - and gov’t pays them Likely have spillover effects Neighbors receive benefits since less rodents nearby means less for them too Thus ‘social demand’ for rodent control is higher than ‘market demand’
and Distortion : p0,q0 too low Q P Q0 P0 S-v DMDM S D S: represents higher WTP for rodent control P1 Q1 What is NSB? What are CS, PS? Social WTP
and Social Surplus - locals Q P Q0 P0 S-v DMDM S DSDS P1 Q1 B P E P1+v A C Make decisions based on S-v, Dm What about others in society, e.g. neighbors? Because of vouchers, Residents buy Q1
and Nearby Residents Q P Q0 P0 S-v DMDM S DSDS P1 Q1 B P E P1+v A C Added benefits are area between demand above consumption increase What is cost voucher program? F G
and Voucher Market Benefits Program cost (vouchers):A+B+C+G+E ---- Gain (CS) from target pop: B+E Gain (CS) in nearby: C+G+F Producers (PS): A+C Net: C+F
and Notes about Public Spending Resource allocation to one project always comes at a ‘cost’ to other projects E.g. Pittsburgh stadium projects “Use it or Lose it” There is never enough money to go around Thus opportunity costs exist Ideally represented by areas under supply curves Do not consider ‘sunk costs’ Three cases (we will do 2, see book for all 3)
and Opportunity Cost: Land Q P D b Price Case of inelastic supply (elastic supply in book, trivial) Government decides to buy Q acres of land, pays P per acre Alternative is parceling of land to private homebuyers What is total cost of project? S Can assume quantity of land is fixed (Q)
and Opportunity Cost: Land Q P D b Price Government pays PbQ0, but society ‘loses’ CS that they would have had if government had not bought land. This lost CS is the ‘opportunity cost’ of other people using/buying land. Total cost is entire area under demand up to Q (colored) S 0
and Example: Change in Demand for Concrete Dam Project If Q high enough, could effect market Shifts demand -> price higher for all buyers Moves from (P0,Q0) to (P1,Q1).. Then?? Q0 P0 D a Price Quantity D+q’ S P1 Q1
and Another Example: Change in Demand Original buyers: look at D, buy Q2 Total purchases still increase by q’ What is net cost/benefit to society? Q0 P0 D a Price Quantity D+q’ S P1 Q1 Q2
and Another Example: Change in Demand Project spends B+C+E+F+G on q’ units Project causes change in social surplus! Rule: consider expenditure and social surplus change Q0 P0 D Price Quantity D+q’ S P1 Q1 Q2 E B C FA G G G
and Dam Example: Change in Demand Decrease in CS: A+B (negative) Increase in PS: A+B+C (positive) Net social benefit of project is B+G+E+F Q0 P0 D Price Quantity D+q’ S P1 Q1 Q2 E B C FA G G G
and Final Thoughts: Change in Demand When prices change, budgetary outlay does not equal the total social cost Unless rise in prices high, C negligible So project outlays ~ social cost usually Opp. Cost equals direct expenditures adjusted by social surplus changes Quantity
and Secondary Markets When secondary markets affected Can and should ignore impacts as long as primary effects measured and undistorted secondary market prices unchanged Measuring both usually leads to double counting (since primary markets tend to show all effects)
and Primary: Fishing Days Q1 P D Price Government decides to buy Q acres of land, pays P per acre What is total cost of project? b a Q0 MC0 MC1