ECON 200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 10: Demand Curve, Social Cost, Externality

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Externality: the uncompensated impact of one person"s actions on the well-being of a bystander. Equilibrium fails to maximize the total benefit to society as a whole. Cost to society of producing aluminum is larger than the cost to the aluminum. Social cost is the private cost and the external cost, so it is above the supply curve. Where the demand curve and the social-cost curve intersect is where is socially optimal. Do this through taxes which raise the price and sell at socially optimal. Internalizing the externality: altering incentives so that people take account of the external effects of their actions: produce larger quantity than socially desirable. Same as before but the externality affects the demand curve. Lead markets to produce a smaller quantity than socially desirable. Technology spillover- if one firm discovers something then this advance can be used by other firms as well. The government gives tax breaks to industries that create technology spillovers.

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