EC238 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Market Failure, Allocative Efficiency, Public Good

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28 Aug 2016
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Market failure: the result of an inefficient market condition. Third type of market failure would be considered to be imperfect information. Public good: a commodity that is nonrival in consumption and yields nonexludables benefits: nonrivalness: characteristics of indivisible benefits of consumption such that one"s person"s consumption does not preclude that of another. Rationing of a good is not desirable: nonexcludability: characteristic that makes it impossible to prevent others from sharing in the benefits of consumption. Rationing of a good is not feasible. The relevant market definition is the public good, environmental quality, which possesses theses characteristics. Public goods generate a market failure because the nonrivalness and nonexcludability characteristics prevent market incentives from achieving allocative efficiency. Achieving allocative efficiency in a public goods market depends on the existence of well-defined supply and demand functions: but the public goods definition disallows the conventional derivation of market demand.

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