EC120 Chapter Notes - Chapter 10: Demand Curve, Deadweight Loss, Social Cost

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17 Apr 2016
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EC120 Full Course Notes
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Externality: the uncompensated impact of one person"s actions on the well- being of a bystander. The cost to society of producing any good that causes a negative externality is greater than the cost to the private irm. Social cost = private cost (to the irm) + cost to bystanders. Social cost curve is above the private cost curve (supply curve) because it takes into account the cost to bystanders (relates to supply curve, not demand curve) The diference between the two cost curve relects the cost of the pollution emitted. The optimal (best) quantity of production would be the intersection between the demand curve and the social cost curve! The reduction in total surplus associated with the ineicient allocation of resources due to an externality can be measured as deadweight loss. Internalizing the externality: alter incentives so that people take account of the external efects of their actions.

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