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Environmental Economics Week 2

Environmental Economics Week 2. MARKET FAILURE AND ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS READING: Common: Chapter 4 Perman et al: Chapter 5 and 6. SOME ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEM AREAS. Global climate change greenhouse gases ozone depletion International air pollution acid rain  Local air pollution

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Environmental Economics Week 2

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  1. Environmental EconomicsWeek 2 MARKET FAILURE AND ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS READING: • Common: Chapter 4 • Perman et al: Chapter 5 and 6

  2. SOME ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEM AREAS • Global climate change • greenhouse gases • ozone depletion • International air pollution • acid rain  • Local air pollution • particulates and ozone smogs • Water pollution • nitrate spillovers • Water scarcity • Miscellaneous • Intensive agriculture • Population conglomeration • Loss of biodiversity & irreversible eco-system change • Soil fertility losses • Accumulation of toxins in various media

  3. ALL OF THESE CAN USEFULLY BE ANALYSED UNDER THE FRAMEWORK OF MARKET FAILURE

  4. MARKET EQUILIBRIUM OUTCOMES UNDER “IDEAL” CONDITIONS S = MC = SMC (social marginal cost) D = MB = SMB (social marginal benefit) That is: • market supply properly takes account of all relevant costs • market demand properly takes account of all relevant benefits • And so the competitive market mechanism generates a maximisation of SOCIAL net benefits.

  5. MARKET EQUILIBRIUM OUTCOMES UNDER “IDEAL” CONDITIONS S = MC = SMC (social marginal cost) D = MB = SMB (social marginal benefit) • Also note that consumer and producer surpluses (= social surplus) are maximised. • But market economies in practice do not satisfy the set of ideal conditions, and so privately optimal outcomes do NOT lead to socially optimal ones.

  6. MARKET FAILURE OCCURS WHERE ONE OR MORE OF THESE CONDITIONS IS NOT SATISFIED (AND AN INEFFICIENT OUTCOME OCCURS AS A RESULT). We focus in this course on two kinds of market failure: EXTERNALITY • An externality arises when the activity of a firm or household gives rise to unintended consequences for other firms or households, and do not figure in the costs or benefits of the activity as perceived by the originating firm or household. PUBLIC GOOD • A public good has the property of non-rivalry; that is, consumption of it by one person does not reduce the amount of it available for others.

  7. EXTERNALITIES • An externality occurs when an activity generates unintended effects on others for which no payment or compensation is made. • Externalities arise because of the absence of private property rights – if they existed payment/compensation would occur. • Externalities can be thought of as “missing markets”. • Or, as unpriced goods and services. • Externalities may be beneficial or harmful • In the absence of corrective policy, the level of an activity that gives rise to a harmful/beneficial externality will be too high/low.

  8. A classification of externalities

  9. Two ways of visually showing how externalities lead to a divergence between privately efficient (market) and socially efficient outcomes. In the diagrams, we have an adverse externality such that social costs exceed private costs.

  10. B, C SC = C + External cost C B Q* Q** Q

  11. Price SMC = PMC + EMC PMC P** P* EMC PMB Quantity per period Q* Q**

  12. Note at Q* that SMC  SMB But it does at Q** (i.e. in the situation where the externality is internalised).

  13. Situation where no externality exists P Consumer Surplus S P* Producer Surplus D Q* Q

  14. The efficiency loss due to an externality P SMC S = PMC P** P* D = SMB Q** Q* Q

  15. Consumer and producer surpluses with an externality P CS SMC S = PMC P** D = SMB Q** Q* Q

  16. Efficiency loss from ignoring externality = NB1 - NB2 NB NB without externality NB0 NB1 NB2 NB incl externality Q** Q* Q

  17. PUBLIC GOODS/PUBLIC BADS External effects often have the characteristics of public goods/bads.

  18. Public goods/bads have two characteristics • Non-rivalry – consumption by one agent does not reduce the amount available to others • Non-excludability – if provided for one agent, others cannot be excluded from consumption • Examples of public goods – national defence, lighthouses, air pollution abatement. • Examples of public bads – air pollution

  19. Externality Originating In Beneficial Harmful Production Activity Externality Honey production Pollination for fruit growing Fossil fuel combustion Atmospheric pollution Consumption Activity Externality Vaccination of one person Reduced risk of infection for rest of population High stereo volume in apartment Noise pollution All of these externalities are non-rivalous and non-excludable; so they are public (goods/bads) externalities.

  20. PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH PUBLIC GOODS/BADS • The free-rider problem. So not feasible to supply via markets. • Even if there were no free rider problem, non-rivalry may imply zero marginal costs. So efficient price is zero! (For a bridge, for, toll charge should be zero provided there is no congestion). • It is difficult to estimate the marginal benefits (or marginal costs) associated with these goods. Why? • Think about pollution abatement, as an example.

  21. £ Marginal benefits of pollution abatement

  22. PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH PUBLIC GOODS/BADS • Pollution abatement. • There may be no market here; so nothing to observe directly. • Free rider issues again: will people reveal preferences? • Even if the good were traded, then market demand curves would not correctly express socially valuation. (Market demand curves are horizontal sums; we need vertical sums here).

  23. Pollution Control: Two Questions for Public Policy • How much pollution should be allowed? What is the policy objective? • 2. How to affect polluters’ behaviour so as to bring about the desired level of pollution? What policy instrument to use? We will answer these questions later.

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