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Microeconomics Level 2

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Title: Microeconomics Level 2


1
Microeconomics Level 2  Module 3
  • Sandeep Kapur

2
Welfare Economics  Equity and Efficiency
3
EQUITY
  • How fair is the distribution of goods and
    services?
  • Of course, fairness is a value judgement
  • In principle, we can distinguish between
  • Horizontal equity equal treatment of equals
  • Vertical equity different treatment of different
    people to reduce effects of inequality

4
Equity of Allocations
Allocation a description of who gets what
  • Starting from A, a move to E or F reflects a
    decrease in equity

5
Efficiency of allocations
  • Relative to initial point A
  • B is better for all (and C is worse)
  • D is better for one, and no worse for other
  • B D are said to be Pareto improvements on A

6
Pareto Efficiency
  • An allocation is Pareto efficient (given tastes,
    resources and technology) if it is impossible to
    find another allocation that makes someone better
    off and nobody worse off.
  • There can be more than one Pareto efficient
    allocation, and
  • even inequitable allocations may be Pareto
    efficient

7
Are Markets Pareto Efficient?
  • Key Questions
  • Do free markets always lead to Pareto efficient
    allocations?
  • If not, why not?
  • What are the implications for policy?

8
Competitive Equilibrium Pareto Efficiency
  • Consider two industries, meals and films.
    Suppose both are competitive and in equilibrium.
    Meals cost Pm and films Pf each.
  • Last meal eaten yields Pm extra utility to
    consumer last film watched yielded Pf
  • Pm and Pf are also the marginal costs of
    production
  • This suggests that there is no way to reallocate
    production to generate a Pareto improvement

9
An Example
  • Suppose Pf 2Pm consumers need two meals to
    give up one film
  • But producers need twice as much resources to
    'serve' a film instead of a meal
  • So they could offer two meals for an extra film,
    but no net gain for consumers or producers
  • PUNCH LINE Competitive equilibrium is Pareto
    efficient (The Invisible Hand Theorem!)

10
AN IDEA
  • If markets are efficient
  • confine government intervention to
    redistribution, and
  • rely on markets to achieve efficiency
  • However markets may not always be efficient
  • Market Failure a circumstance in which
    equilibrium in free markets fails to achieve an
    efficient allocation

11
Sources of Market Failure
  • Tax distortions
  • Externalities
  • Public goods
  • Imperfect information
  • Imperfect competition
  • We will look at each of these in turn

12
Group Work Efficiency and Equity
  • Government intervention in the economy is
    pervasive. For each type of intervention listed
    below identify the possible rationale. Is it
    primarily
  • (Pareto) efficiency considerations?
  • a desire for greater equity?
  • something else?
  1. Income tax
  2. Taxation of petrol
  3. Windfall tax on utilities
  4. Regulating electricity prices

13
Group Work
  1. Regulating discharge of sewage in the Thames
  2. Legislation against insider trading
  3. Banning the use of cocaine
  4. Unemployment insurance
  5. Making primary school compulsory
  6. Maintaining an army
  7. Running the NHS
  8. Running the Post Office

Is there a trade-off between equity and
efficiency?
14
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15
MARKET FAILURE Taxation
  • Suppose we have a tax only on films
  • This tax wedge implies, for last film seen
  • post-tax price exceeds producer's gain
  • consumers value exceeds producer's value
  • Implications for meals industry
  • Marginal private cost of meals is below their
    marginal social cost

16
Taxes distort
  • Consequently, if only films are taxed,
  • films are too expensive and meals too cheap
  • we get too many meals relative to social optimum,
    and too few films
  • IDEA a tax on meals too, to correct the
    imbalance

17
THE SECOND BEST
  • If there exists a price distortion, get rid of it
    to achieve the FIRST BEST (full efficiency)
  • However, if you cannot get rid of the distortion
    in one market, it is not always efficient to
    arrange for other markets to be undistorted
  • Rather, it helps to spread the inevitable
    distortion more thinly, by DELIBERATELY
    introducing new distortions in other markets

18
MARKET FAILURE Externalities
  • EXTERNALITY
  • A circumstance in which an individual's
    production or consumption affects others' utility
    or productivity
  • the effect is direct (and not through the market
    or prices)

19
Externalities examples
  • Adverse consumption externality smoking
  • Beneficial consumption externality painting the
    exterior of your house
  • Beneficial production externality bees and
    orchards
  • Adverse production externality pollution

20
Why Externalities Matter
  • THE ESSENTIAL PROBLEM
  • Market mechanism aligns private costs and
    benefits
  • Externalities imply divergence between social and
    private costs (or social and private benefit)
  • If divergences exist, should not expect socially
    efficient allocations

21
Adverse Production Externality
  • For social optimum, want social marginal cost
    social marginal benefit
  • At the free market equilibrium E, output Q is
    higher than social optimum Q this results in
    dead-weight loss EFG
  • SOLUTION 1 (Pigou). Corrective taxation

22
Property Rights
  • Solution 2 (Coase)
  • Assign property rights and let people trade these
    rights in pseudo-market
  • Initial assignment affects distribution but gets
    an efficient outcome
  • This solution does not work if there are high
    transactions costs or free riding

Efficient quantity is Q
23
MARKET FAILURE Public Goods
  • Consumed in same quantity by everyone
  • Examples defence, safe streets, TV signal
  • Characteristics
  • Non-rival consumption my consumption does not
    diminish what is available for you
  • Non-excludability impossible or too costly to
    prevent people from consuming it

24
Why free markets cant get public goods right
  • Possible solutions
  • The problem of free-riding
  • Note that government needs to ensure right
    quantity, but does not need to produce it itself

25
MARKET FAILURE Imperfect information
  • In reality, information in markets is less than
    perfect (e.g. we often need to search)
  • Often there is asymmetry of information between
    buyers and sellers
  • Resulting in the problems of adverse selection
    and moral hazard
  • This may result in incomplete markets or even
    missing markets
  • Solutions mitigate informational problems or
    provide goods directly

26
Moral hazard
  • If you are fully insured against losses, you have
    little incentive to be careful
  • insurance company bears the loss, not you
  • increased carelessness increases risk of loss
    this is moral hazard
  • The usual solution
  • Insurance company forces you to bear some risk
    (excess payments or coinsurance) to maintain
    incentives to be careful
  • Here you can buy only partial insurance. In some
    cases, no market at all

27
MARKET FAILURE Imperfect Competition
  • The essential problem
  • With market power, price exceeds marginal cost,
  • so social marginal benefit exceeds social
    marginal cost,
  • leading to Pareto inefficiency
  • Importantly, it is the restriction of output that
    is costly
  • First-best solution align price marginal costs

28
MONOPOLY benefits
  • Dynamic efficiency more RD?
  • Better coordination of decisions
  • Economies of scale
  • With natural monopolies, economies of scale so
    strong that it is cheaper to have one producer
    rather than duplicate fixed costs.
  • Here, imposing the first-best solution
    (i.e., price marginal cost) results in losses

29
MONOPOLY Solutions
  • Solution 1. Nationalize and finance losses
    through taxes
  • politically not very feasible
  • Solution 2. Break monopoly e.g. anti-trust
    legislation in US
  • However, no good for natural monopolies

30
MONOPOLY Solutions
  • Solution 3. Regulate Prevent abuse of monopoly
    power through price and non-price controls (UK
    approach)Practical issues when is regulation
    necessary? What form?
  • Solution 4. Nurture competition Encourage new
    entrants, (but will they enter and will it only
    lead to cream skimming?)
  • In general, difficulties with the mix of remedies

31
Group Work Pollution control
  • You are the National Rivers Regulator, tackling
    the problem of a chemical firm that is polluting
    the Thames
  • If everything could be quantified and valued,
    show in a diagram how a pollution tax can induce
    the firm to behave in a socially efficient
    manner.
  • Instead of the tax you offer the firm a pollution
    quota (specifying the maximum pollution it can
    discharge in any year). Show the size of the
    quota in the diagram. What difference does it
    make to the efficient quantity of pollution?
  • Now suppose information is harder to come by. As
    the regulator, you are not entirely certain about
    the firm's cost curve. Does this affect your
    choice between tax and quotas?
  • Lastly, suppose there are two chemical firms
    discharging into the river, one cleaner than the
    other. Is it better to
  • set a pollution tax? (same rate per unit polluted
    for both?)
  • set each a quota?
  • auction pollution quotas?

32
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33
INDUSTRIAL POLICY
  • Central idea market failure calls for an active
    role for the government
  • Based on the idea that intervention can
  • Correct failures in markets for knowledge
  • Assist in the diffusion of new technologies
  • Correct for excessive risk aversion
  • Circumvent coordination failures, etc.
  • However, the possibility of government failure

34
Research Development
  • PROBLEM Inventions are a public good, so that
    unregulated markets may not produce enough
  • RD activity equals 2-3 of GDP in OECD
  • THREE SOLUTIONS
  • Patents confer time-bound legal monopoly on the
    inventor
  • Procurement use government research labs e.g.
    defence
  • Patronage provide subsidies to universities

35
New technologies and standards
  • Problem uncertainty about new technologies and
    standards may cause
  • lock-in in to poor standards (QWERTY?)
  • delays in adoption (VHS and Betamax)
  • Solution guide technological choices?

36
Risk
  • Problem Markets may display excessive risk
    aversion
  • Collectively, society can pool risks across
    projects spread risks across population
  • Solution underwrite private sector losses?
    venture capital?

37
Coordination of economic activity
  • Location externalities and new lessons in
    economic geography
  • Sunrise industries correct deficient incentives
    to acquire skills and imperfection in markets for
    loans to new firms
  • Sunset industries managing the transition
    prevent survival of an inefficiently large number
    of firms

38
Government Failure
  • However, we must beware of the possibility of
    government failure.
  • For instance, the possibility that governments
    may face the same informational constraints as
    markets.
  • If so, government intervention may just replace
    market failure with government failure

39
Taxation and Public Spending
40
Taxation
  • Variety of taxes
  • Direct taxes income tax, corporation tax
  • Indirect taxes on expenditure, VAT

41
Desirable Characteristics of Tax System
  • Equity
  • Efficiency
  • Administrative simplicity
  • Cost of ensuring compliance
  • Responsiveness to changing economic circumstances

42
Progressivity of taxation
  • Proportional average tax rate constant
  • Progressive average tax rate rises with income
  • Regressive average tax rate falls with income
  • We must assess progressiveness carefully
    incidence of taxes, benefits, direct provision of
    goods

43
Tax incidence who really bears the tax
Tax incidence diagrams either (as here) at
consumer prices (supply curve shifts) or at
producer prices (demand curve shifts)
Relative to original equilibrium, gross price
goes up but less than tax (i.e., net price goes
down)
44
Tax incidence who really bears the tax
  • Regardless of who the tax is levied on, its
    INCIDENCE depends on elasticity of supply and
    demand
  • Inelastic supply/demand means bear the tax
  • Elastic supply/demand escape the burden

45
Principles of Optimal Taxation
  • EFFICIENCY
  • aim to minimise harmful effects on choice
  • use lump-sum taxes wherever sensible
  • if choosing variable taxes, choose tax rates to
    minimise distortion
  • Ramsey principle tax rate higher if supply or
    demand is inelastic
  • of course, taxes often help correct other
    distortions pollution taxes, and sin taxes on
    cigarettes, alcohol

46
Principles of Optimal Taxation
EQUITY Two principles Ability to pay take
more from the rich Benefits principle
beneficiaries of public provision to pay more
Vertical equity suggests progressive tax system
but this may conflict with efficiency
47
Public Spending
  • Government expenditure around 40 of GDP
  • Social insurance contributory benefits such as
    unemployment, sickness, pensions benefits
  • Equity non-contributory benefits, such as income
    support, housing benefit, family support
  • Merit goods what society believes all should
    have (externalities or paternalism) benefits-in
    kind, education, health
  • Public goods law and order, defence

48
Public Spending
  • The big three
  • Social security
  • Health
  • Education
  • account for 3/5 of all public spending.
  • We shall study these more carefully

49
Health care
50
Health Care a merit good?
  • Sources of muddled thinking
  • an emotional issue
  • is health a basic right? But so is food
  • is health care a commodity like any other? like
    cars, houses, etc.

51
Health Care the issues
  • Is a private market for health care efficient?
  • Is it equitable?
  • Is public production and allocation more
    efficient? More equitable?
  • Efficiency
  • macro what fraction of GDP on health
  • micro how to allocate resources within system
  • Equity but of what?

52
Health Care the product
  • Health care is only an input. Output -- improved
    health outcomes -- also depends on diet,
    environment, lifestyle
  • Does health care reduce suffering? prolong life?
    improve life?
  • And how valuable is improved health? Impact on
    output, earnings, income? Impact on happiness

53
Why intervene in health care
  • Would a private health care market be efficient?
  • Imperfections in competition
  • Imperfections due to asymmetric information and
    insurance
  • Externalities and public goods aspects
  • In addition to efficiency issues
  • equity issues
  • ethical issues

54
Imperfect competition
  • Would a private health care market be perfectly
    competitive?
  • monopoly power of medical associations
  • market power of drug companies
  • Possible solutions
  • Regulation
  • Countervailing power (say, drug purchases by the
    NHS)

55
Imperfect information
  • Do people know if they are ill? What treatment do
    they need? What is available?
  • Here seller (doctor) knows more than buyer
  • technical complexity of information
  • patients' inability to weigh alternatives
  • high cost of errors
  • In sum, this is hardly rational consumer choice
  • Solutions provision of information and
    regulation but both are costly
  • Public provision?

56
Problems with Health Insurance
  • Pattern of demand small probability of major
    expenditure
  • Usually buy insurance in such situations but
    insurance markets suffer from many problems
  • adverse selection attract especially sick
  • moral hazard tendency to over-treat
  • correlated risk are hard to insure epidemics
  • missing markets for congenital problems
  • Can intervene to reduce these problems, but
    causes other problems.
  • Social insurance?

57
Externalities and public good
Problem Communicable diseases are a negative
externality A solution to subsidise treatment In
general, the public good aspect of basic
healthcare
58
Other reasons for intervention
  • Equity arguments
  • Moral and ethical arguments
  • babies, organs should not be sold

59
How to intervene?
  • EFFICIENCY who should PRODUCE health care?
    private, public, or mixed production?
  • Equity how should we PAY for it?
  • tax (payments based on ability or need?)
  • tax private (help for the poor?)
  • private insurance (compulsory?)
  • Should production and finance be handled
    together? e.g. health maintenance organisations

60
Other questions
  • Macro-economic issue
  • How much should we spend on health? rising cost
    of health care
  • ageing population
  • more sophisticated (and expensive) treatment

61
Health care in the UK case notes
  • THE PATIENT NHS
  • GPs provide primary care guide and gatekeeper
  • Since 2003, Foundation Trusts, with financial and
    managerial autonomy run hospitals
  • Primary Care Trusts purchase hospital care,
    community services
  • Strategic Health Authorities to oversee Primary
    Care Trusts and NHS Trusts
  • Department of Health

62
THE CASE HISTORY
  • Universal and virtually free access
  • Publicly financed
  • Good health outcome
  • Cheap expenditure is 7-8 of GDP,
  • But rising (up by 70 in real terms 1979-96, due
    to bulges in birth rate in post-war period,
    ageing population new, costly treatments)
  • A recurrent crisis of confidence queues, alleged
    inefficiencies

63
Health Spending, 2001
Spending per head, USPPP Spending, per cent of GDP
Australia 2350 8.9
France 2561 9.5
Japan 1984 7.6
Germany 2808 10.7
UK 1992 7.6
USA 4887 13.9
64
DIAGNOSIS?
  • Inefficient or under-funded?
  • If inefficient, why?
  • skills shortages?
  • bureaucratic inefficiency?
  • absence of choice for patients?
  • If under-funded,
  • more public money or private resources?

65
PREVIOUS TREATMENT
  • 1989 White Paper called for an internal market
  • invisible hand rather than central control
  • separation of funding from provision purchaser
    can buy from competing providers
  • GP fund-holders to manage own budgets
  • Hospital Trusts, with greater managerial control
    and financial autonomy
  • Were the objectives genuine, or just a response
    to fiscal crisis?

66
SWITCHING PROTOCOL
  • Prior to 1991, central planning
  • 1991-97 quasi markets
  • 1997-2003 move away from markets
  • 2003- competition and choice

67
LONG-TERM CARE
  • More public money or is privatisation inevitable?
  • Will this create a dual structure, for rich and
    poor? Implications for life expectancy?
  • Private health care currently cheap (residual use
    only, complicated treatment done by NHS, high
    number of young in privately insured, low cost of
    medical services in the UK), but will this last?

68
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69
Group Work Education
  1. Identify the salient characteristics of education
    as a commodity. Is it a merit good?
  2. Do you expect private markets for education to be
    efficient? Identify reasons for any market
    failures.
  3. Private markets for education are likely to be
    inequitable. Should we worry about this?
  4. If a university degree has any worth,
    individuals will be prepared to pay for it. This
    makes a case for more private finance in higher
    education. Comment.

70
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71
The Welfare State
72
Public versus Private Sector
  • When comparing public with private sector, it is
    important to remember that
  • public sector losses were sometimes intentional
  • cost structures differ Post Office vs private
    couriers

73
Are governments less efficient than markets?
  • Evidence
  • Private sector firms are more efficient PROVIDED
    they operate in markets with strong competition
  • Key issue not ownership, but severity of
    competition (or competition policy)
  • E.g., many UK utilities improved in RUN-UP to
    privatisation, while they were still in public
    hands
  • But this is not to deny that there have been
    serious inefficiencies

74
Agency theory and incentives
  • Imagine a project where
  • the agent's effort affects probability of success
  • effort is unobservable or hard to measure
  • If so,
  • the principal needs to provide incentives (carrot
    or stick) to induce effort
  • without incentives, individuals may slack-off
  • Lesson incentives matter

75
Why is the public sector less efficient?
  • 1. The incentives problem
  • At the organisational level no fear of
    bankruptcy, no competition
  • At the individual level not enough carrot
    (relatively fixed salary) or stick (relative
    security of tenure)
  • In sum, incentive structures are relatively flat
  • Why not use better incentive schemes in the
    public sector?
  • Mostly because measuring success is harder due
    multiplicity of objectives and poor information
  • 2. Institutional aspects what DO civil servants
    do?

76
Lessons for policy makers
  • Market failure does not make an automatic case
    for intervention
  • Sometimes government intervention makes matters
    worse. Informational problems affect both public
    and private sectors.
  • regulation often has perverse effects
  • vulnerability of civil servants to rent-seeking
    behaviour
  • Weigh existing inefficiencies against risk of
    government failure

77
Supply-side economics
  • Central idea
  • Force government OUT of market place, to unleash
    private sector dynamism.
  • Use microeconomic incentives to increase
    productivity
  • Origins
  • disenchantment with Keynesian, demand-side
    thinking
  • tax fatigue of the 1970s

78
Supply-side economics suggestions
  • Cut marginal tax rates to provide incentive for
    hard work). Cut the dole, to increase labour
    participation. If output goes up, so might tax
    revenue (Laffer curve)
  • Cut taxes on savings, dividends, to reduce
    distortions
  • Cut business tax, allow more depreciation to
    induce new investment
  • Rein in the state, cut govt spending (cut real
    interest rates), encourage privatisation
  • Reform labour market (curb the Trade Unions)
    Encourage profit-sharing schemes to incentivise
    workers. Vocational training, etc.

79
Evaluation of Supply-side economics
  • did well on the inflation front
  • tax cuts may not induce more workSubstitution
    effect (work more because work is rewarded more),
    vs income effect (work less as you can get goods
    you want with fewer hours of work). Evidence
    inconclusive
  • likewise, cutting taxes on interest raises the
    return on saving, but may not induce people to
    save more
  • budgetary troublesUS government found it easier
    to reduce public investment but not current
    expenditure (wages of civil servants). Laffer was
    off the mark
  • aggregate investment did not expand much, once
    you correct for the business cycle
  • incentive effects of some US tax cuts were
    perverse

80
In sum
  • Implications for efficiency
  • Claims about likely efficiency gains were
    exaggerated
  • Implications for equity
  • Given that they aim to increase incentive to work
    and invest, supply-side policies -- if successful
    -- will inevitably widen the gap between those
    who succeed and those that fail.
  • Did alter income distribution (tax cuts were
    deeper for the rich public spending on poor fell)

81
THE WELFARE STATE
  • Designed for both equity and efficiency
  • Equity
  • reduce poverty (insurance) and create a more
    equal distribution of wealth
  • not just altruism, also desire for social
    cohesion
  • Efficiency
  • provide insurance against risks that market do
    not cover well (unemployment, illness)
  • provide social services to correct for market
    failures in health, education, housing, pensions

82
LESSONS OF HISTORY
  • Dynamics of welfare state provision
  • welfare state disconnects relationship between
    effort and reward
  • but habits die hard habit-restrained lags
    between welfare provision and deterioration of
    incentives
  • overshooting of welfare provision, leading to
    potential fiscal crises

83
LESSONS OF HISTORY
  • Is the welfare state viable?
  • Thatcher's contribution linking payments to
    inflation not earnings
  • Should benefits be targeted or universal?

84
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85
Cost-Benefit Analysis
86
COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
  • Analysis of costs and benefits useful for
  • Capital projects
  • Policy and programme development
  • Use or disposal of existing assets
  • Environmental standards, health and safety
  • Procurement decisions

87
THE PROCESS
  • Justify action and set objectives
  • Appraise the options including the do minimum
    and so-called politically infeasible
    onesIdentify costs and benefits of each option
  • Adjustments
  • non-market impacts
  • risk and optimism
  • distributional impacts
  • Develop and implement solutions
  • Evaluation

88
FORMS OF APPRAISAL
  • Financial Appraisal
  • Compare revenue with costs, as private firm does
  • (Social) Cost-benefit analysis
  • Quantify costs and benefits of each option,
    including costs and benefits that the market does
    not value
  • Cost-effectiveness analysis
  • If benefits are hard to quantify, compare the
    costs of achieving some target level of benefits

89
SOME TECHNICALITIES
  • TIME PREFERENCE
  • People prefer 1 today to 1 tomorrow
  • demand a premium to postpone consumption
  • OPPORTUNITY COST OF CAPITAL
  • cost in terms of opportunities foregone
  • rate r at which you borrow
  • DISCOUNTING AND NET PRESENT VALUE
  • What discount rate should we use?
  • INFLATION erodes future values
  • either all values real or all values nominal

90
Decision rule Net Present Value Criterion
  • Forecast the cash flow generated by the project
    over its lifetime
  • Assess opportunity cost of capital, and discount
    future cash flows
  • Calculate the net present value (NPV) sum of
    discounted net flows
  • Decision Rule
  • ONE OPTION Invest if NPV is positive
  • MANY OPTIONS Invest in project with highest NPV
  • All this is easier said than done

91
SOCIAL COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
  • While private sector cares about profits,
    government must consider a larger of benefits
    and costs
  • The government uses the Net Present Value
    criterion but, to the extent social benefits and
    costs diverge from private benefits and costs,
    estimates of NPV could differ
  • Social rate of time preference may differ from
    market rates of interest

92
VALUING NON-MARKET IMPACTS
  • Evaluate non-market consequences
  • externalities, including environmental ones
  • consumers surplus
  • saving of time, human life
  • possibilities of catastrophic risk
  • Often hard to value these. Can use
  • Willingness to Pay (WTP)
  • Willingness to Accept (WTA)
  • Contingent Valuation Methods (CVM)

93
Some caveats
  • Macroeconomic effects
  • Need not make allowances for broader effects,
    such as tax flow-backs, savings in benefit
    payments, etc. These may happen even if the
    proposed project is rejected and some other is
    accepted
  • What prices should the government use?
  • Best to use MARKET PRICES. The use of so-called
    shadow prices can be justified only if there is
    severe market failure.

94
Other issues
  • What if the project has irreversible consequence?
  • Be cautious. Raise the threshold of acceptance
    for a project to compensate for the
    irreversibility.
  • Distributional impact
  • see how costs and benefits affect different groups

95
The effect of the chosen discount rate
  • Consider stream of positive returns NPV falls as
    we use a higher discount rate

Choice of too high a discount rate will reject
good projects Choice of too low a discount rate
will accept bad ones
96
What discount rate should the government use?
  • Should it use the market rate at which private
    firms attract finance?
  • In THEORY, the answer depends on aggregate impact
    of all public investment on private investment
    and consumption
  • In PRACTICE, government uses a fixed rate of
    social time preference for consistency.
  • was set at 6 pa in real terms
  • now has been stripped down to 3.5
  • Lower rates for long-term projects

97
Risk and Uncertainty
  • What if benefits or cost are uncertain?
  • Private firms add some risk premium to the
    discount rate this lowers NPV, making acceptance
    of risky project less likely
  • Should the government discount risk?In
    principle, if the government can spread risk very
    thinly across the population, answer is NO.
  • In practice, risk evaluation and management is an
    important part.

98
Managing and Evaluating Risk
  • IDENTIFY all risks
  • Assess what can be transferred, at low cost, to
    the private sector
  • Use of pilot projects to learn more about costs
    and benefits. Use flexible designs avoid the risk
    of being hostage to fortune.
  • Eliminate optimism bias
  • Monte Carlo analyses sensitivity analyses to
    look at NPV of project under alternative
    assumptions about the value of uncertain
    parameters

99
Green Accounting A Case Study
100
Further reading
  • Begg, Fisher and Dornbush, Economics, 7th
    edition, PART 3
  • John Kay, The Truth about Markets their genius,
    their limits, their follies, Allen Lane, 2003
  • Nicholas Barr, The Economics of the Welfare
    State, 4th edition, Oxford University Press, 2004
  • This is a good manual for many aspects of public
    finance and the welfare state. See especially
  • chapter 3 social theory and the state
  • chapter 4 state intervention
  • chapter 12health and health-care
  • chapter 13 housing

101
MicroeconomicsLevel 2
  • Sandeep Kapur
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