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Are all the costs of making the good included in the price? Externalities
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If you’ve ever been helped or harmed by someone else's decisions, you’ve experienced an externality.
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Externalities An externality is an economic side effect of a good or service that generates benefits or costs to someone other than the person deciding how much to produce or consume EOC Study Guide Microeconomics # 4
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Positive Externalities A positive externality is a beneficial side effect of an action that is felt by other
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How Can Legislators encourage positive externalities? How can they get consumers to buy more of a good? ▫By subsidizing consumers for purchasing the good How can they get producers to make more of a good? ▫By subsidizing producer for making the good Examples: Electric cars Solar panels College education
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Negative Externalities A negative externality is an adverse side effect of an act that is felt by others
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Are all of the costs of a business “paid” by the business? Hot sauce video clip
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How Can Legislators prevent negative externalities from causing market failure? How can you get consumers to buy less of a good and/or producers to make less of a good? ▫By taxing goods that are overproduced Examples: Damage caused by fossil fuels Illness caused by smoking
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Possible solutions to externalities
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Real Life Examples of Dealing With Externalities: Example One: ▫Cabin owner who didn’t want the sheep to be trailed through his property
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Real Life Examples of Dealing With Externalities Continued: Example Two: ▫The homeowner who didn’t want the ice cream truck to go down his street http://www.songsforicecreamtrucks.com/
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