CAS EC 101 Chapter Notes - Chapter 5.1: Market Failure, Cost, Deadweight Loss

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CAS EC 101 Full Course Notes
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CAS EC 101 Full Course Notes
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Example of a positive externality - production of college educations because people who do not pay for them will nonetheless benefit from them. How a negative externality in production reduces economic efficiency: normally economists assume that the producer of a good or service must bear all the costs of production. But this assumption is not true: e. g. Electricity production: private costs - borne by the producer/utility, external costs - borne by people who are not consumers of electricty, social cost = private cost + external cost, graph, s1 is the market supply curve. How a positive externality in production reduces economic efficiency: positive externalities interfere with achieving economic efficiency, normally, economists assume that the demand curve represents all the benefits form consuming a good. But the production of some goods and services generates benefits that are not captured by the consumers who consume the good or a service so are not included i the market demand curve for that good.

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