A-Level Economics Notes on Market Failure

Definitions

  1. Market Failure: A situation where the market fails to allocate resources efficiently, leading to a loss in social welfare.
  2. Externalities: Costs or benefits that affect parties who did not choose to incur those costs or benefits.
  3. Public Goods: Goods that are non-excludable and non-rivalrous, meaning they are available to all and one person’s use doesn’t reduce its availability to others.
  4. Merit Goods: Goods that are under-consumed if left to market forces. Examples include education and healthcare.
  5. Demerit Goods: Goods that are over-consumed if left to market forces. Examples include cigarettes and alcohol.
  6. Information Asymmetry: A situation where one party has more or better information than the other, creating an imbalance of power.
  7. Monopoly: A market structure where there is only one producer/seller for a product.
  8. Oligopoly: A market structure in which a few firms dominate the market.
  9. Price Mechanism: The system where the forces of supply and demand interact to determine the price of goods and services.
  10. Allocative Efficiency: A state of the economy in which production represents consumer preferences.
  11. Productive Efficiency: A situation where the economy could not produce any more of one good without sacrificing the production of another good.
  12. Social Welfare: The overall well-being of the entire society.
  13. Free Rider Problem: The issue that arises when people can enjoy a good service without paying for it.
  14. Tragedy of the Commons: A situation where individuals acting in their own self-interest deplete shared resources.
  15. Government Intervention: Actions taken by a government to correct market failures.
  16. Pigovian Tax: A tax levied on any market activity that generates negative externalities.

Types of Market Failure

Public Goods

  • Definition: Goods that are non-excludable and non-rivalrous, meaning people can’t be prevented from using them, and one person’s use doesn’t reduce its availability for others.
  • Real-World Example: National defense is a public good because it protects everyone in a country, regardless of whether they pay taxes.

Externalities

  • Definition: Costs or benefits that affect third parties not directly involved in a transaction.
    • Positive Externalities: Benefits to third parties.
    • Negative Externalities: Costs to third parties.
  • Real-World Example:
    • Positive: Vaccination provides herd immunity, benefiting even those who aren’t vaccinated.
    • Negative: Air pollution from factories affects the health of nearby residents.

Information Asymmetry

  • Definition: A situation where one party in a transaction has more or better information than the other.
  • Real-World Example: Used car sales, where the seller knows more about the car’s condition than the buyer.

Monopoly Power

  • Definition: Occurs when a single firm controls a large portion of the market, leading to higher prices and lower output.
  • Real-World Example: De Beers had a monopoly on the diamond market for most of the 20th century, controlling prices and supply.

Solutions to Market Failure

1. Government Regulation

  • Description: The government can impose laws and regulations to correct negative externalities.
  • Real-World Example: Emission standards for factories to reduce pollution.

2. Taxation and Subsidies

  • Description: Taxes can be levied on harmful products, while subsidies can be provided for beneficial ones.
  • Real-World Example: Carbon tax on fossil fuels, subsidies for renewable energy.

3. Public Provision

  • Description: The government can directly provide public goods.
  • Real-World Example: Public funding for national defense or public parks.

4. Creating Property Rights

  • Description: Assigning property rights can solve issues like overfishing or deforestation.
  • Real-World Example: Fishing quotas to prevent depletion of fish stocks.

5. Information Dissemination

  • Description: Spreading information can correct information asymmetry.
  • Real-World Example: Mandatory labeling of food products.

6. Breaking Up Monopolies

  • Description: Anti-trust laws can be used to break up or regulate monopolies.
  • Real-World Example: The breakup of AT&T into smaller companies in the 1980s.

7. Pigovian Taxes

  • Description: Taxes that are equal to the external cost or benefit of a good.
  • Real-World Example: Tax on cigarettes to account for healthcare costs.

8. Tradable Permits

  • Description: Allow companies to buy and sell the right to emit a certain amount of pollution.
  • Real-World Example: The European Union Emission Trading System (EU ETS).

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