ECON 1100 Chapter Notes - Chapter 16: Externality, Perfect Competition, Allocative Efficiency

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Failure of the unregulated market system to achieve an efficient allocation of resources. Allocative efficiency: all goods will have p = mb = mc (mb is the marginal benefit) When both the production efficiency and the allocative efficiency are both equal. However the entire economy is never monopoly free . The pm that the monopoly charges will be larger than its mc of production. Market failure described a situation where the free market in the absence of government interruption fails to achieve allocative efficiency. We are in a situation where the government intervention can make things better or more efficient. There are four situations in which free markets fail to achieve allocative efficiency: Firms that are innovative (temporary power), only room for a few big low-cost producers, selling differential products which consumers desire over others. An externality occurs whenever actions taken by firms or consumers directly impose costs on or confer benefits on others.

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