The document discusses various causes of market failure including public goods, externalities, monopoly power, information asymmetry, income inequalities, and merit and demerit goods. It also discusses remedies that governments can implement to address market failures.
The document discusses various causes of market failure including public goods, externalities, monopoly power, information asymmetry, income inequalities, and merit and demerit goods. It also discusses remedies that governments can implement to address market failures.
The document discusses various causes of market failure including public goods, externalities, monopoly power, information asymmetry, income inequalities, and merit and demerit goods. It also discusses remedies that governments can implement to address market failures.
The document discusses various causes of market failure including public goods, externalities, monopoly power, information asymmetry, income inequalities, and merit and demerit goods. It also discusses remedies that governments can implement to address market failures.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 38
MARKET FAILURE
MEANING, CAUSES AND REMEDIES
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 1
Meaning of Market Failure • Market failure occurs when market forces fail to achieve efficiency in the allocation of scarce resources. • It results from the violation of the condition for allocative efficiency
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 2
Cause of Market Failure • Market failure may be caused by: • The existence of public goods • The existence of externalities • Monopoly power • Information asymmetry (information failure) • Income inequalities • Merit and demerit goods
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 3
Private Goods • Goods that are rival in consumption and excludable in consumption – Rivalry in consumption implies that the consumption of the good by one person reduces the quantity of the good available to other people. – Excludability in consumption implies that the good is only available to those who are able to pay the price for it. – E.g.: Yam, cornflakes, bicycles
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 4
Public goods • These are goods that are non-rival and non- excludable in consumption. – Non-rivalry implies the consumption of the good by a person does not reduce the quantity of the good available to others. Many people can simultaneously consume the good and yet the quantity of the good will not reduce. – Non excludability implies that it is impossible to restrict the consumption of the good only to those who have paid for it. A person can consume the good without paying for it and it is impossible or impracticable to prevent him/her from the use of the good. – E.g.: streetlights, David 22/04/2024 lighthouses, traffic lights Ako, Ghana International School 5 Public Goods and Market Failure • These two features of public goods result in the free rider problem. This is the tendency for a consumer to consumer the good and refuse to pay for it. • The private sector will not allocate resources to the production of public goods because they cannot generate revenue from its production. • Consequently, market forces fail to allocate resources to the production of public goods. 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 6 Private Costs and Private Benefits • A private cost is the cost of an activity to an individual economic unit, such as a consumer or a firm. For instance, a chemical company will have to pay for workers, raw materials and plant and machinery when it produces chemicals. • A private benefit is the benefit of an activity to an individual economic unit, such as a consumer or a firm. The revenue received from the sale of a product is a private benefit to the firm. 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 7 Merit Goods and Demerit Goods • Merit Goods: private goods whose consumption generates benefits to the consumer directly and to other persons. They are under consumed because consumers are not fully informed of the benefits inherent in increased consumption of merits goods. • They are goods that the government feels everyone must have access to because it benefits the entire society if they do. E.g.: education, healthcare, immunisation • Demerits Goods: goods whose consumption generates negative consequences for the consumer and others in society. They are over consumed because of lack of knowledge of the negative effects of their consumption • Governments normally discourage the use of demerit goods. E.g.: alcohol, narcotic David 22/04/2024 drugs, pollution. Ako, Ghana International School 8 Merit and Demerit Goods • Merit goods cause market failure because market forces produce too little of it although society desires more. • People usually consume less education because it involves cost now although the benefits occur in future. • Demerit goods cause market failure because society is better off if less alcohol and cigarettes are produced. • But market forces will produce more of it because it is profitable to do so. 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 9 Externalities • Externalities are third party or spill over effects arising from the production and / or consumption of goods and services for which no compensation is paid. • There two types of externalities: • External costs (Negative externalities) – These are the negative spill over effects of the consumption and production decisions of economic agents. E.g. Pollution • External Benefits (Positive externalities) – These are the positive spill over effects of the consumption and production decisions of economic agents. E.g. Reduction in the spread of diseases due to recycling of waste. 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 10 Social Costs and Social Benefits • Social cost is the cost to the entire society as a result of the production and/or consumption of a good or service. • Social Cost = Private cost + External cost • Social Benefit is the benefit to the entire society as a result of production and/or consumption of a good/service. • Social Benefit = Private Benefit + External Benefit 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 11 Externalities and Market Failure • Private firms compare only private benefits and private cost to determine if the production of a good is profitable. • The production of a good to the private firm is profitable if private cost = private benefit • Society as a whole compares social cost to social benefit to determine the desirability of an economic activity. • The production of a good is efficiency from society’s perspective if social cost = social benefit 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 12 Positive Externalities and Market Failure
• The recycling of waste yields huge benefits to the
rest of society. The society will better off if more waste recycling plants are built because they generate positive externalities. • But the private firm will not build more waste recycling plants if they do not think their private costs will equal private benefits. • Therefore positive externalities cause under production and under consumption of recycled waste (misallocation of resources) 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 13 Negative Externalities and Market Failure • The production and consumption of alcohol is profitable so private firms allocate resources to its production. But society will be better off if less alcohol is produced because it causes negative externalities (Social cost > social benefit). • But the private firm will continue to allocate resources to its production because they find it profitable (Private cost = Private Benefit) • Therefore negative externalities cause an overproduction and overconsumption of alcohol (misallocation of resources) 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 14 Monopoly and Market Failure • A monopolist is a single producer of a good or service which has not substitute. • Monopolies cause market failure because they have no incentive to increase efficiency and reduce prices because of the absence of competition. • They also reduce production in order to increase price and earn abnormal profit. • From society’s perspective, the monopolists causes a misallocation of resources by restricting output even when society requires increased production. 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 15 Information Asymmetry • Efficient operation of a perfectly competitive market requires that producers and consumers are equally well informed and have perfect knowledge of the market. • The market fails to achieve efficiency in the allocation of resources when the parties to a transaction do not have a perfect knowledge of the market.
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 16
Income Inequalities • This arises when few people are extremely rich whilst a larger number of people are poor. • It causes market failure because the rich have far more material resources(houses, clothes, food, cars etc.) than they actually need whilst the poor cannot afford to feed themselves. • A more even distribution of income will improve the collective wellbeing of society than a skewed one.
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 17
Remedies for Market Failure • Market failure caused by the existence of public goods can be solved by the provision of those public goods by government funded through general tax revenue. • Where negative externalities cause market failure, the government could impose indirect taxes equal to the value of the external costs, impose permissible pollution limits or compel the firms concerned to invest in cleaner technologies.
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 18
Remedies for Market Failure • If the market fails because of external benefits, the government could provide subsidies to encourage the production and consumption of the good. • The government could nationalise a monopoly, impose price controls or open up the industry to competition in order to resolve market failure caused by monopoly power. 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 19 Remedies for Market Failure • Government could increase education and awareness of the populace about the dangers associated with the consumption of demerit goods like alcohol and tobacco. Knowledge of the health risks will help reduce consumption of such goods. • Increased education and awareness creation of the benefits associated with increased consumption of merit goods like education, exercise, vaccination and frequent medical checkups.
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 20
Remedies for Market Failure • Regulation : the imposition of rules and restrictions on the consumption of demerit goods: e.g. banning smoking in public places, age limits for the purchase of alcohol and cigarettes, and health warnings on cigarette packets. • Those who flout the regulations could be sanctioned through fines and penalties • Make basic education and vaccinations free and compulsory 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 21 Class Work
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 22
22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 23 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 24 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 25 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 26 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 27 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 28 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 29 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 30 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 31 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 32 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 33 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 34 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 35 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 36 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 37 22/04/2024 David Ako, Ghana International School 38