01:220:102 Chapter Notes - Chapter 16: Externality, Marginal Utility, Marginal Cost

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01:220:102 Full Course Notes
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01:220:102 Full Course Notes
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An externality occurs when individuals impose costs or benefits to others but don"t have an economic incentive to take those costs or benefits into account when making decisions. The principal sources of market failure is that actions create side effects that are not properly taken into account. Externalities arise from the side effects of actions. External cost: an uncompensated cost that an individual or firm imposes on others: ex: pollution, traffic congestion, driving while texting increases risk for accident. External benefits: a benefit that an individual or firm confers on others without receiving compensation. External costs and benefits are known as externalities: external costs are negative externalities, external benefits are positive externalities. Externalities can lead to private decisions (decisions by individuals or firms that are not optimal for society as a whole. Governments should impose an environmental policy that limits pollution.

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