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ECN101: Externalities

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Title: ECN101: Externalities


1
ECN101 Externalities
  • Define
  • Negative and Positive Externalities
  • Production and Consumption Externalities
  • Solutions
  • Private
  • Government Intervention

2
Market Efficiency - Market Failures
  • Recall that invisible hand of the marketplace
    leads self-interested buyers and sellers in a
    market to maximize the total benefit that society
    can derive from a market.

But market failures can still happen.
3
Market Failures Externalities
  • When a market outcome affects parties other than
    the buyers and sellers in the market,
    side-effects are created called externalities.
  • Externalities cause markets to be inefficient,
    and thus fail to maximize total surplus.

4
An externality arises...
  • . . . when a person engages in an activity that
    influences the well-being of a bystander and yet
    neither pays nor receives any compensation for
    that effect.

5
Market Failures Externalities
  • When the impact on the bystander is adverse, the
    externality is called a negative externality.
  • When the impact on the bystander is beneficial,
    the externality is called a positive externality.

6
Examples of Negative Externalities
  • Automobile exhaust
  • Cigarette smoking
  • Barking dogs (loud pets)
  • Loud stereos in an apartment building

7
Examples of Positive Externalities
  • Restored historic buildings
  • Research into new technologies

8
The Market for Aluminum...
Supply (private cost)
Demand (private value)
0
Quantity of Aluminum
9
The Market for Aluminum and Welfare Economics
  • The quantity produced and consumed in the market
    equilibrium is efficient in the sense that it
    maximizes the sum of producer and consumer
    surplus.

10
The Market for Aluminum and Welfare Economics
  • If the aluminum factories emit pollution (a
    negative externality), then the cost to society
    of producing aluminum is larger than the cost to
    aluminum producers.

11
The Market for Aluminum and Welfare Economics
  • For each unit of aluminum produced, the social
    cost includes the private costs of the producers
    plus the cost to those bystanders adversely
    affected by the pollution.

12
Pollution and the Social Optimum...
Supply
(private cost)
Demand
(private value)
Quantity of
0
Aluminum
13
Negative Externalities in Production
  • The intersection of the demand curve and the
    social-cost curve determines the optimal output
    level.
  • The socially optimal output level is less than
    the market equilibrium quantity.

14
Achieving the Socially Optimal Output
  • Internalizing an externality involves altering
    incentives so that people take into account the
    external effects of their actions.

15
Achieving the Socially Optimal Output
  • The government can internalize an externality by
    imposing a tax on the producer to reduce the
    equilibrium quantity to the socially desirable
    quantity.

16
Positive Externalities in Production
  • When an externality benefits the bystanders, a
    positive externality exists.
  • The social costs of production are less than the
    private cost to producers and consumers.

17
Positive Externalities in Production
  • A technology spillover is a type of positive
    externality that exists when a firms innovation
    or design not only benefits the firm, but enters
    societys pool of technological knowledge and
    benefits society as a whole.

18
Positive Externalities in Production...
Supply (private cost)
Demand
(private value)
Quantity
0
of Robots
19
Positive Externalities in Production
  • The intersection of the demand curve and the
    social-cost curve determines the optimal output
    level.
  • The optimal output level is more than the
    equilibrium quantity.
  • The market produces a smaller quantity than is
    socially desirable.
  • The social costs of production are less than the
    private cost to producers and consumers.

20
Internalizing Externalities Subsidies
  • Government many times uses subsidies as the
    primary method for attempting to internalize
    positive externalities.

21
Internalizing Production Externalities
  • Taxes are the primary tools used to internalize
    negative externalities.
  • Subsidies are the primary tools used to
    internalize positive externalities.

22
Consumption Externalities...
(b) Positive Consumption Externality
(a) Negative Consumption Externality
Price
of Alcohol
Price of
Supply
Education
(private cost)
Supply
(private cost)
Social
Demand (private value)
value
Demand
(private value)
Social value
0
Q
Q
0
Q
Q
Quantity of
Quantity
MARKET
OPTIMUM
MARKET
OPTIMUM
Education
of Alcohol
23
Externalities and Market Inefficiency
  • Negative externalities in production or
    consumption lead markets to produce a larger
    quantity than is socially desirable.
  • Positive externalities in production or
    consumption lead markets to produce a larger
    quantity than is socially desirable.

24
Private Solutions to Externalities
  • Government action is not always needed to solve
    the problem of externalities.

25
Types of Private Solutions to Externalities
  • Moral codes and social sanctions
  • Charitable organizations
  • Integrating different types of businesses
  • Contracting between parties

26
The Coase Theorem
  • The Coase Theorem states that if private parties
    can bargain without cost over the allocation of
    resources, then the private market will always
    solve the problem of externalities on its own and
    allocate resources efficiently.

27
The Coase Theorem
  • Ex Suppose Rachel and Joey are roommates and
    Rachel likes to listen to music. The following
    table shows the private marginal benefit (PMB)
    and the private marginal cost (PMC) to Rachel of
    listening to music. However, Joey is not a music
    fan. The table illustrates the marginal damage
    (MD) that each hour of music does to Joey

28
If Rachel makes a decision of how much music to
listen to on her own, what will she choose and
why?
29
If Rachel makes a decision of how much music to
listen to on her own, what will she choose and
why?
Rachels private choice PMBPMC
30
What is the socially optimal level of music? How
do you know?
31
What is the socially optimal level of music? How
do you know? Compare PMB to SMC
Socially optimal because PMBSMC
32
Why are they different?
Socially optimal because PMBSMC
Rachels private choice PMBPMC
33
Why are they different? No one owns the rights to
the noise level in the room, so Rachel doesnt
consider the costs to Joey.
Socially optimal because PMBSMC
Rachels private choice PMBPMC
34
Suppose their neighbor Monica has power to assign
property rights to the noise level in the
apartment.
Socially optimal because PMBSMC
Rachels private choice PMBPMC
35
What if she gives the rights to Joey? Joey owns
the right to music/noise in the apartment. If
Rachel wants music hours, she can buy it from
Joey.
How many hours of music will Joey choose
initially?
36
What if Joey has the rights ?
How many hours of music will Joey choose
initially? 0 Can Rachel pay him to listen to
more hours?
37
What was Rachels net benefit of the 1st
hour?What was the cost to Joey of the 1st
hour?Can they agree to a deal?
38
What was Rachels net benefit of the 1st hour?
10What was the cost to Joey of the 1st hour?
4Can they agree to a deal? YES, Rachel can pay
Joey enough to get him to listen to the 1st hour
of music
39
What was Rachels net benefit of the 2nd
hour?What was the cost to Joey of the 2nd
hour?Can they agree to a deal?
40
What was Rachels net benefit of the 2nd hour?
6What was the cost to Joey of the 2nd hour?
4Can they agree to a deal? YES
41
What was Rachels net benefit of the 3rd
hour?What was the cost to Joey of the 3rd
hour?Can they agree to a deal?
42
What was Rachels net benefit of the 3rd hour?
4What was the cost to Joey of the 3rd hour?
4Can they agree to a deal? YES
43
What was Rachels net benefit of the 4th
hour?What was the cost to Joey of the 4th
hour?Can they agree to a deal?
44
What was Rachels net benefit of the 4th hour?
2What was the cost to Joey of the 4th hour?
4Can they agree to a deal? NO-Rachel cannot
pay enough
Hours of music if Joey has the property rights
45
What if she gives the rights to Rachel? Now,
Rachel owns the right to music/noise in the
apartment. If Joey wants quiet, he can buy it
from Rachel.
How many hours of music will Rachel choose
initially?
46
What if Rachel has the rights?
How many hours of music will Rachel choose
initially? 5 Can Joey pay her to listen to fewer
hours?
47
What was Rachels net benefit of the 5th
hour?What was the cost to Joey of the 5th
hour?Can they agree to a deal?
48
What was Rachels net benefit of the 5th hour?
0What was the cost to Joey of the 5th hour?
4Can they agree to a deal? YES, Joey can pay
Rachel enough to get her not to listen to the 5th
hour of music
49
What was Rachels net benefit of the 4th
hour?What was the cost to Joey of the 4th
hour?Can they agree to a deal?
50
What was Rachels net benefit of the 4th hour?
2What was the cost to Joey of the 4th hour?
4Can they agree to a deal? YES
51
What was Rachels net benefit of the 3rd
hour?What was the cost to Joey of the 3rd
hour?Can they agree to a deal?
52
What was Rachels net benefit of the 4th hour?
4What was the cost to Joey of the 4th hour?
4Can they agree to a deal? YES
53
What was Rachels net benefit of the 2nd
hour?What was the cost to Joey of the 2nd
hour?Can they agree to a deal?
54
What was Rachels net benefit of the 2nd hour?
6What was the cost to Joey of the 2nd hour?
4Can they agree to a deal? NO - Joey cannot
pay enough
Hours of music if Rachel has the property rights
55
Coase Theorem
  • Socially efficient number of hours?
  • 3
  • How many hours of music if Joey has the property
    rights?
  • 3
  • How many hours of music if Rachel has the
    property rights?
  • 3

56
Coase Theorem
  • With low bargaining costs, the private market
    will reach the efficient outcome on their own.
    The efficient solution arises no matter who gets
    the property rights.

57
Coase Theorem Problems
  • Need few transaction costs - small number of
    people
  • Need to be able to identify the source of the
    externality

58
Why Private Solutions Do Not Always Work
  • Sometimes the private solution approach fails
    because transaction costs can be so high that
    private agreement is not possible.

59
Public Policy Toward externalities
  • When externalities are significant and private
    solutions are not found, government may attempt
    to solve the problem

60
Public Policy Toward Externalities
  • Command-and-Control Policies
  • Market-Based Policies
  • Pigouvian Tax
  • Tradeable rights

61
Command-and-Control Policies
  • Usually take the form of regulations
  • Forbid certain behaviors.
  • Require certain behaviors.
  • Examples
  • Requirements that all students be immunized.
  • Stipulations on pollution emission levels set by
    the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

62
Market-Based Policies
  • Government uses taxes and subsidies to align
    private incentives with social efficiency.
  • Pigovian taxes are taxes enacted to correct the
    effects of a negative externality.

63
Examples of Regulation versus Pigovian tax
  • If the EPA decides it wants to reduce the amount
    of pollution coming from a specific plant. The
    EPA could
  • tell the firm to reduce its pollution by a
    specific amount (i.e. regulation).
  • levy a tax of a given amount for each unit of
    pollution the firm emits (i.e. Pigovian tax).

64
Pigovian Tax
Supply
(private cost)
Demand
(private value)
Quantity of
0
Aluminum
65
Pigouvian Tax Problems
  • Need to know who is creating the externality
  • Need to know the value of the cost -- MD

66
Pigouvian Tax Distributional Effects
  • The consumers and producers in the market that
    creates the externality pay the tax and are worse
    off.

67
Pigovian Subsidy
Supply (private cost)
Demand
(private value)
Quantity
0
of Robots
68
Market-Based Policies
  • Tradable pollution permits allow the voluntary
    transfer of the right to pollute from one firm to
    another.
  • A market for these permits will eventually
    develop.
  • A firm that can reduce pollution at a low cost
    may prefer to sell its permit to a firm that can
    reduce pollution only at a high cost.

69
Regulation and Tradable Pollution rights
  • Example We want to limit the output of sulfur
    dioxide (SO2), which causes acid rain. Suppose
    Wisconsin Power and Light (WPL) currently emits
    13 units of sulfur dioxide and Tennessee Valley
    Authority (TVA) currently emits 15 units of
    sulfur dioxide for at total of 28 units. Suppose
    the government wants to decrease the total units
    of sulfur dioxide to 22.

70
Marginal Cost of Eliminating Sulfur Dioxide (S02)
What is marginal cost (MC)? Cost of reducing
pollution by one more unit!
71
Suppose the government regulates that both must
reduce pollution to 11 units. Cost of regulation?
72
Recall WPL currently emits 13 units and TVA
currently emits 15
How many units does WPL have to eliminate to
get down to the govt regulated level of 11?
2. How much will that cost? How many units does
TVA have to eliminate? 4. How much will that
cost?
73
WPL currently emits 13 units and TVA currently
emits 15
How many units does WPL have to eliminate to
get down to the govt regulated level of 11?
2. How much will that cost? 100200 300 How
many units does TVA have to eliminate? 4. How
much will that cost? 4005007009002500 Total
cost of regulation 30025002800
74
Now suppose each company is given 11 rights to
pollute and they are tradable (i.e., one company
can buy them from the other)
  • Who is going to buy permits?
  • Who is going to sell?

75
A firm that can reduce pollution at a low cost
may prefer to sell its permit to a firm that can
reduce pollution only at a high cost.
76
Now suppose each company is given 11 rights to
pollute and they are tradable (i.e., one company
can buy them from the other)
  • Who is going to buy permits? TVA
  • Who is going to sell? WPL

77
Now suppose each company is given 11 rights to
pollute and they are tradable (i.e., one company
can buy them from the other)
78
Start with 11 permits each, how many units of
pollution have they eliminated?
79
Recall, there are only 22 permits in the economy.
If TVA wants to pollute more than 11, how can
they? Buy a permit from WPL!
80
How much is TVA willing to pay, not to have to
reduce the last unit of pollution (from 12 to
11)?How much is WPL willing to accept to
eliminate one more unit of pollution (from 11 to
10)?
81
How much is TVA willing to pay, not to have to
reduce the last unit of pollution (from 12 to
11)?How much is WPL willing to accept to
eliminate one more unit of pollution (from 11 to
10)?
82
Will a deal take place? YES! - Note still only 22
permits in the economy.
83
Recall, there are only 22 permits in the economy.
If TVA wants to pollute more than 12, how can
they? Buy a permit from WPL!
84
How much is TVA willing to pay, not to have to
reduce the last unit of pollution (from 13 to
12)?How much is WPL willing to accept to
eliminate one more unit of pollution (from 10 to
9)?
85
Will a deal take place? YES Note still only 22
permits in the economy.
86
Recall, there are only 22 permits in the economy.
If TVA wants to pollute more than 13, how can
they? Buy a permit from WPL!
87
How much is TVA willing to pay, not to have to
reduce the last unit of pollution (from 14 to
13)?How much is WPL willing to accept to
eliminate one more unit of pollution (from 9 to
8)?
88
Will a deal take place? NO stop at line 3!
89
From their initial polluting levelsHow many did
WPL eliminate? 13-9 4 At what cost? How many
did TVA eliminate? 15-13 2 At what cost?
90
WPL eliminated 4 At what cost?
1002003004501050 TVA eliminated 2 At what
cost? 400500900Total Cost 1050900 1950
91
Which is the lower cost way of eliminating
pollution, regulation or tradable pollution
rights?
  • Total cost of regulation
  • 2800
  • How?
  • WPL reduced by 2, TVA reduced by 4
  • Total cost of tradable pollution rights
  • 1950
  • How?
  • WPL reduced by 4, TVA reduced by 2

92
Which is more efficient, regulation or tradable
pollution rights? Tradable pollution rights!
  • Total cost of regulation
  • 2800
  • How?
  • WPL reduced by 2, TVA reduced by 4
  • Total cost of tradable pollution rights
  • 1950
  • How?
  • WPL reduced by 4, TVA reduced by 2

93
Which is more efficient, regulation or tradable
pollution rights? Tradable pollution rights!
  • Regulations
  • WPL reduced by 2, TVA reduced by 4
  • Tradable rights
  • WPL reduced by 4, TVA reduced by 2

WHY? With tradable pollution rights, the company
that can reduce pollution in the least costly
way does!
94
Government Intervention - Establish Property
Rights
  • Externalities lead to inefficiencies because
    property rights (who owns the good) arent clear
  • Example Rachel and Joey

95
Coase Theorem
  • With low bargaining costs, establishing property
    rights is sufficient to lead to an efficient
    solution. The efficient solution arises no
    matter who gets the property rights.

96
Coase Theorem Benefits
  • Minimum government intervention just assign
    property rights
  • Ex Government doesnt need to know the value of
    the damage being done.

97
Coase Theorem Distributional Effects
  • Person who gets the property rights is better
    off, person who does not, is worse off.

98
Summary
  • When a transaction between a buyer and a seller
    directly affects a third party, the effect is
    called an externality.
  • Negative externalities cause the socially optimal
    quantity in a market to be less than the
    equilibrium quantity.
  • Positive externalities cause the socially optimal
    quantity in a market to be greater than the
    equilibrium quantity.

99
Summary
  • Those affected by externalities can sometimes
    solve the problem privately.
  • The Coase theorem states that if people can
    bargain without a cost, then they can always
    reach an agreement in which resources are
    allocated efficiently.

100
Summary
  • When private parties cannot adequately deal with
    externalities, then the government steps in.
  • The government can either regulate behavior or
    internalize the externality by using Pigovian
    taxes or assign pollution/property rights.
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