ECON 2010 Lecture Notes - Lecture 19: Deadweight Loss, Overconsumption, Marginal Utility

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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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Q* is where the marginal social benefit and the marginal social cost intersect. Non-rival goods everyone can consume it and it will never run out. We want as many public goods as possible but public goods cannot be bought and sold in a free market economy. If there is no governance, then there is no production because individual benefit is too low. Co(cid:373)(cid:373)o(cid:374) resour(cid:272)e goods put so(cid:272)iety at a tradeoff. If e(cid:448)ery(cid:271)ody had a(cid:272)(cid:272)ess to a good that"d (cid:271)e a(cid:373)azi(cid:374)g (cid:271)ut the(cid:374) there"s (cid:374)o i(cid:374)(cid:272)e(cid:374)ti(cid:448)e to (cid:272)reate (cid:374)e(cid:449) (cid:272)o(cid:374)te(cid:374)t (cid:271)e(cid:272)ause the produ(cid:272)ers (cid:449)ould make no money. Regulatory standards are direct rules that force producers/consumers to act a certain way. Pros= simple, socially optimal outcomes are easily obtained. Cons= inflexible (no exceptions to the rules), less efficient depending on the individual/firm, hard to administer. Corrective taxes/subsidies are per-unit taxes that move individual curves so they intersect with the societal curves.

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