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Market Failures Frederick University 2008
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Main Economic problems Questions What and how much How For Whom Problems Efficiency in allocation Efficiency in motivation Efficiency in distribution
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Market Functions Achieve: Efficiency in allocation Efficiency in motivation Efficiency in distribution
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Market failures Market failures are all cases when markets fail to perform their functions - functional market failures, or markets perform their functions, but the outcomes do not fit the system of social values - social market failures
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Public goods I won’t use it and I am not gonna pay for it! Public Goods – goods, which are nonrival and nonexcludable in consumption
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Externalities A chemical company would like to build a plant here What about our rivers? We’ll make them any color you want
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Externalities Externalities – cases where social costs and benefits differ from private costs and benefits P Q D S – private cost q1q1 p1p1 Social cost qsqs psps
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Merit goods Merit goods – goods, whose utility consumers tend to underestimate P Q D S q1q1 P1P1 subsidy q2q2 p2p2 P3P3
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Demerit goods Demerit goods – goods whose utility consumers tend to overestimate P Q D S tax q1q1 p1p1 q2q2 p2
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Asymmetric Information Racing? Let me just get my car insurance!!!
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Incomplete Markets Bounded rationality Moral hazard and adverse selection
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Monopoly vs. Pure Monopoly Monopoly – an ability to produce a good or a service that others are not able or allowed to. Pure monopoly – a market structure, determined by only one producer of a good with no close substitutes
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Natural Monopoly Natural monopoly – a monopoly position, determined by factors, which cannot be replicated Types of natural monopoly: Monopoly, created by a possession of resources, inaccessible to competitors Monopoly, justified by economies of scale Local monopoly
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Economies of Scale P Q AC
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Institutional Monopoly Institutional monopoly – a monopoly, deliberately created by economic decision makers Types of institutional monopoly: Monopoly, created by a collusion, or a merger Monopoly, created by institutional barriers to entry to the industry Government monopoly
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Monopoly Pricing P Q D MR MC Qm P AC
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L P Q O QmQm AR D MC AC MR Pure Monopoly and Perfect competition PmPm Qp.c. Pp.c. K N Consumer surplus = ∑ (P –MWP) Under perfect competition = KLN Under pure monopoly = NRT RT G GTL – the portion of the consumer surplus, which is a deadweight loss for the society JGL – the portion of the producer surplus, which is a deadweight loss for the society Producer surplus = ∑ (P-MC) Under pure monopoly the producer surplus rises by KGTR at the expense of the consumer surplus J TLJ – total deadweight loss for the society
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Instability Unstable macroeconomic equilibrium, creating cyclical fluctuations in employment and price level
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The Role of Government Musgrave’s Three Branches stabilization allocation distribution
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The government failure Of course you may register a complaint about all the government paperwork, sir,... But it has to be in writing.
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