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Topic 2.8Economics SL45 flashcards

Market failure: externalities and common pool resources

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Card 1 of 452.8.1
Question

What is a negative externality?

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Card 1definition
Question

What is a negative externality?

Answer

A cost from production or consumption that is imposed on a third party NOT involved in the transaction. The third party bears the cost without being compensated. Examples: factory pollution harming local residents, passive smoking.

💡 Hint

Cost to third party not involved in the transaction.

Card 2definition
Question

What is a Pigouvian tax?

Answer

A tax set equal to the external cost per unit. It "internalises the externality" by making the polluter pay the full social cost. Ideally, S shifts up to MSC, and the market produces at the socially optimal quantity (Q*).

💡 Hint

Tax = external cost → forces polluter to pay → Q moves to Q*.

Card 3concept
Question

What is welfare loss from a negative externality?

Answer

The area of lost well-being to society because output exceeds the socially optimal level. It is the triangle between MSC and MSB, from Q* (social optimum) to Qm (market output). Each unit beyond Q* costs society more than it benefits.

💡 Hint

Triangle between MSC and MSB from Q* to Qm.

Card 4definition
Question

What are tradable emissions permits?

Answer

A government sets a total cap on emissions and issues permits. Firms can trade them — those cutting pollution cheaply sell excess permits; those with high abatement costs buy permits. This creates a market price for pollution and incentivises efficiency.

💡 Hint

Cap total emissions → firms trade permits → market-based.

Card 5process
Question

How do you draw a negative externality of production diagram?

Answer

Draw D (= MPB = MSB), S (= MPC), and MSC above MPC. The gap between MSC and MPC is the external cost per unit. Market equilibrium at MPC ∩ D (Qm). Social optimum at MSC ∩ D (Q*). Shade the welfare loss triangle between Q* and Qm.

💡 Hint

MSC above MPC, both intersect D. Triangle = welfare loss.

Card 6comparison
Question

What is the difference between a negative externality of production and consumption?

Answer

Production: MSC > MPC — the firm does not pay the full social cost (e.g. factory pollution). Consumption: MSB < MPB — the consumer does not account for costs imposed on others (e.g. smoking causing passive smoke, driving causing congestion).

💡 Hint

Production: MSC > MPC. Consumption: MSB < MPB.

Card 7comparison
Question

Compare carbon taxes and tradable permits for reducing emissions.

Answer

Carbon tax: fixes the PRICE of pollution (predictable cost, uncertain quantity). Permits: fix the QUANTITY (certain emission level, unpredictable price). Tax is simpler to administer; permits guarantee the environmental target. Both internalise the externality.

💡 Hint

Tax fixes price; permits fix quantity. Both internalise externality.

Card 8formula
Question

What is the relationship between MSC and MPC when there is a negative externality of production?

Answer

MSC = MPC + external cost. The marginal social cost is higher than the marginal private cost because the external cost (e.g. pollution damage) is not included in the firm's decision-making. The gap between MSC and MPC equals the external cost per unit.

💡 Hint

MSC = MPC + external cost. Gap = externality per unit.

Card 9process
Question

How do you draw a negative externality of consumption diagram?

Answer

Draw S (= MPC = MSC), D (= MPB), and MSB below MPB. The gap between MPB and MSB is the external cost per unit. Market equilibrium at S ∩ MPB (Qm). Social optimum at S ∩ MSB (Q*). Shade welfare loss triangle between Q* and Qm.

💡 Hint

MSB below MPB, both intersect S. Triangle = welfare loss.

Card 10concept
Question

Why do negative externalities cause market failure?

Answer

The market over-produces/over-consumes relative to the socially optimal quantity. Firms base decisions on MPC (not MSC), so they produce where MPC = MPB instead of MSC = MSB. The result: too much output, too much pollution/harm.

💡 Hint

Firms ignore external costs → over-production → Q > Q*.

Card 11concept
Question

Why is the market equilibrium NOT the social optimum when negative externalities exist?

Answer

The market equilibrium only considers private costs and benefits (MPC = MPB). It ignores external costs. The social optimum is where MSC = MSB, which occurs at a LOWER quantity. The difference (Qm − Q*) represents over-production.

💡 Hint

Market ignores externality → too much output → Qm > Q*.

Card 12concept
Question

What other government responses can address negative externalities?

Answer

1) Regulation (bans, emission standards, speed limits). 2) Education campaigns (anti-smoking, recycling). 3) Direct provision of alternatives (public transport to reduce car use). 4) International agreements (Paris Climate Agreement).

💡 Hint

Regulation, education, alternatives, international agreements.

Card 13example
Question

Give two examples of negative externalities of production.

Answer

1) A coal power plant emitting CO₂ — climate change costs are borne by the whole world. 2) A factory discharging chemicals into a river — fishing communities downstream bear the cost of contaminated water.

💡 Hint

Pollution: COâ‚‚ from coal; chemicals in river.

Card 14process
Question

What labels must you include on a negative externality diagram for full marks?

Answer

Axes (Price/Cost, Quantity), all curves labelled (MPC/S, MSC, MPB/D, MSB if consumption), Qm (market quantity), Q* (social optimum), Pm and P*, external cost per unit (gap), welfare loss triangle shaded and labelled.

💡 Hint

Label: curves, Qm, Q*, prices, gap, welfare loss triangle.

Card 15example
Question

Give a real-world example of a cap-and-trade system.

Answer

The EU Emissions Trading System (EU ETS), the world's largest carbon market. It covers about 40% of EU greenhouse gas emissions. Companies must surrender permits for each tonne of COâ‚‚ emitted. The cap is reduced over time to drive reductions.

💡 Hint

EU ETS — covers 40% of EU emissions.

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Card 16concept
Question

Where is the welfare loss on a positive externality diagram?

Answer

The welfare loss triangle is between Qm and Q* — to the LEFT of the social optimum. For each unit between Qm and Q*, MSB > MSC but the units are not produced/consumed. Society misses out on net benefits.

💡 Hint

Triangle between Qm and Q*, left of social optimum.

Card 17definition
Question

What is a positive externality?

Answer

A benefit from production or consumption that is received by a third party NOT involved in the transaction. The third party gains without paying. Examples: flu vaccination protecting the unvaccinated, beekeeper's bees pollinating nearby crops.

💡 Hint

Benefit to third party not in the transaction.

Card 18concept
Question

How can a subsidy correct a positive externality?

Answer

A subsidy equal to the external benefit per unit shifts supply right (or reduces cost to consumers). This moves output from Qm to Q* (social optimum). On the diagram, S shifts down to align MPC with MSC (production) or effectively lowers the price to consumers (consumption).

💡 Hint

Subsidy = external benefit → output rises to Q*.

Card 19process
Question

How do you draw a positive externality of consumption diagram?

Answer

Draw S (= MPC = MSC), D (= MPB), and MSB above MPB. The gap between MSB and MPB is the external benefit. Market equilibrium at S ∩ MPB (Qm). Social optimum at S ∩ MSB (Q*). Shade welfare loss triangle between Qm and Q*.

💡 Hint

MSB above MPB, both intersect S. Triangle = welfare loss.

Card 20definition
Question

What is government direct provision?

Answer

The government provides the good or service itself (free or below cost) instead of leaving it to the market. Examples: public schools, NHS healthcare, public parks. This ensures consumption at or near the socially optimal level regardless of ability to pay.

💡 Hint

Government provides the good itself — e.g. public schools, NHS.

Card 21comparison
Question

What is the difference between a positive externality of production and consumption?

Answer

Production: MSC < MPC — the firm produces benefits it isn't rewarded for (e.g. R&D creating knowledge spillovers). Consumption: MSB > MPB — the individual doesn't capture all the benefits (e.g. education benefits employers and society too).

💡 Hint

Production: MSC < MPC. Consumption: MSB > MPB.

Card 22formula
Question

What is the relationship between MSB and MPB when there is a positive externality of consumption?

Answer

MSB = MPB + external benefit. The marginal social benefit is higher than the private benefit because third parties gain. The gap between MSB and MPB equals the external benefit per unit.

💡 Hint

MSB = MPB + external benefit. Gap = externality per unit.

Card 23concept
Question

What is the role of legislation in promoting positive externalities?

Answer

Laws can mandate consumption of goods with positive externalities. Examples: compulsory education (most countries require schooling until 16-18), compulsory vaccinations for school entry, building regulations requiring energy efficiency.

💡 Hint

Laws mandate consumption — e.g. compulsory education, vaccination.

Card 24process
Question

How do you draw a positive externality of production diagram?

Answer

Draw D (= MPB = MSB), S (= MPC), and MSC below MPC. The gap between MPC and MSC is the external benefit. Market equilibrium at MPC ∩ D (Qm). Social optimum at MSC ∩ D (Q*). Shade welfare loss triangle between Qm and Q*.

💡 Hint

MSC below MPC, both intersect D. Triangle = welfare loss.

Card 25example
Question

Give a real-world example of a subsidy correcting a positive externality.

Answer

Government subsidies for solar panel installation. Private benefit (lower electricity bills) alone does not justify the cost for many households. The subsidy compensates for the external benefit (lower carbon emissions for society), increasing adoption toward the socially optimal level.

💡 Hint

Solar panel subsidies → more adoption → less carbon.

Card 26concept
Question

Why do positive externalities cause market failure?

Answer

The market UNDER-produces/under-consumes relative to the socially optimal quantity. Consumers only consider MPB, not MSB, so they buy less than is socially optimal (Qm < Q*). Society misses out on the external benefits.

💡 Hint

Consumers ignore external benefits → under-consumption → Qm < Q*.

Card 27comparison
Question

How does a positive externality compare to a negative externality in terms of output?

Answer

Negative externality: market over-produces (Qm > Q*). Positive externality: market under-produces (Qm < Q*). In both cases, the market quantity differs from the social optimum, creating a welfare loss triangle.

💡 Hint

Negative → too much. Positive → too little. Both → welfare loss.

Card 28concept
Question

What are the evaluation points for policies correcting positive externalities?

Answer

Subsidies: opportunity cost, may not reach target group, hard to set correct amount. Direct provision: government failure (inefficiency, poor quality), high tax cost. Legislation: enforcement costs, may be unpopular, inflexible. All: difficulty measuring exact external benefit.

💡 Hint

Opportunity cost, measurement difficulty, enforcement challenges.

Card 29example
Question

Give two examples of positive externalities of consumption.

Answer

1) Vaccination — the vaccinated person is protected (private benefit) AND others are less likely to catch the disease (external benefit, herd immunity). 2) Education — the student gains skills (private benefit) AND society benefits from a more productive, innovative workforce.

💡 Hint

Vaccination (herd immunity) and education (productive workforce).

Card 30concept
Question

Why is it difficult to calculate the exact external benefit?

Answer

External benefits (e.g. from education, vaccination) are hard to measure in monetary terms, are spread across many people over long time periods, and vary with each unit consumed. This makes it difficult to set a precisely correct subsidy.

💡 Hint

Hard to measure, spread widely, vary per unit, long-term.

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Card 31concept
Question

What are the main government solutions to the tragedy of the commons?

Answer

1) Regulation — quotas (fishing limits), bans (moratoriums), emission standards. 2) Taxation — carbon/pollution taxes to raise MPC toward MSC. 3) Tradable permits — cap and trade. 4) Assigning property rights — private ownership creates incentive to conserve.

💡 Hint

Regulation, taxation, permits, property rights.

Card 32definition
Question

What are common pool resources (CPRs)?

Answer

Resources that are RIVALROUS (one person's use reduces availability for others) but NON-EXCLUDABLE (impossible or very costly to prevent access). Examples: ocean fish stocks, clean air, groundwater, forests, grazing land.

💡 Hint

Rivalrous + non-excludable = common pool resource.

Card 33definition
Question

What is the tragedy of the commons?

Answer

A concept described by Garrett Hardin (1968): when a resource is shared and unregulated, each individual has an incentive to over-use it. The private benefit of taking more exceeds the private cost (shared among all users), leading to depletion.

💡 Hint

Shared resource + self-interest → over-use → depletion.

Card 34concept
Question

How do property rights help solve the tragedy of the commons?

Answer

Assigning ownership gives the owner an incentive to conserve the resource for future use (and future profit). If a fishery is privately owned, the owner limits catches to maintain the stock. Without property rights, no one has this long-term incentive.

💡 Hint

Ownership → incentive to conserve for future profit.

Card 35concept
Question

Why does each individual over-use a common resource?

Answer

The full benefit of taking extra goes to the individual, but the cost of depletion is spread across ALL users. So the private marginal benefit > individual share of marginal cost. Rational self-interest leads everyone to take more than is sustainable.

💡 Hint

Benefit = private; cost = shared. So everyone takes too much.

Card 36concept
Question

Why are common pool resources prone to over-exploitation?

Answer

Because they are non-excludable, no one can be prevented from using them. Because they are rivalrous, each user depletes the stock. The private marginal cost (free access) is less than the social cost (depletion), so usage exceeds the sustainable level.

💡 Hint

Free access + depletion = everyone takes too much.

Card 37concept
Question

What is Elinor Ostrom's contribution to CPR management?

Answer

Ostrom (Nobel Prize 2009) showed that communities CAN manage CPRs without government or privatisation. Small groups with clear rules, monitoring, and graduated sanctions can sustainably manage shared resources. Examples: irrigation systems, community forests.

💡 Hint

Communities can self-manage CPRs with rules and monitoring (Nobel 2009).

Card 38concept
Question

How does the tragedy of the commons relate to a negative externality diagram?

Answer

Over-exploitation can be modelled with MSC > MPC. Each fisher/farmer faces low MPC (free access) but the MSC includes depletion of the resource. The market outcome (where MPC = D) produces Qm > Q*. The welfare loss is the triangle between Qm and Q*.

💡 Hint

MSC > MPC diagram → over-use → welfare loss triangle.

Card 39concept
Question

What are the four categories of goods based on excludability and rivalry?

Answer

1) Private goods: excludable + rivalrous (chocolate bar). 2) Public goods: non-excludable + non-rivalrous (street lighting). 3) Common pool resources: non-excludable + rivalrous (fish in the ocean). 4) Club goods: excludable + non-rivalrous (Netflix).

💡 Hint

4 categories: private, public, CPR, club.

Card 40concept
Question

How can you link common pool resources to negative externalities?

Answer

Each user imposes a negative externality on others: their consumption depletes the resource, increasing scarcity for everyone. MSC > MPC because users don't account for the depletion cost. This leads to the same over-use problem as a standard negative externality.

💡 Hint

Each user depletes stock → external cost on other users → MSC > MPC.

Card 41concept
Question

Why are international agreements needed for global CPRs like the atmosphere?

Answer

The atmosphere, oceans, and climate are global CPRs — no single government has jurisdiction. Free-riding is a problem: each country benefits if others cut emissions. International agreements (Paris, Kyoto) set collective targets, but enforcement is weak without a global authority.

💡 Hint

Global CPRs → no single jurisdiction → need collective agreements.

Card 42example
Question

Give Hardin's original grazing commons example.

Answer

Herders share a common grazing field. Each herder gains full benefit from adding one more cow (more milk, more meat), but the overgrazing cost is shared among all herders. So each adds more cows until the field is stripped bare and no one can graze.

💡 Hint

Each herder adds cows → gains private, shares cost → field destroyed.

Card 43example
Question

Why is climate change an example of the tragedy of the commons?

Answer

The atmosphere is a common pool resource (non-excludable, rivalrous in capacity to absorb COâ‚‚). Each country benefits from burning fossil fuels (economic growth) while the cost (climate change) is borne globally. No single country has sufficient incentive to cut emissions alone.

💡 Hint

Atmosphere is a CPR. Each country emits; everyone suffers.

Card 44example
Question

Give a real-world example of a depleted common pool resource.

Answer

North Atlantic cod fisheries collapsed in 1992 — decades of unrestricted fishing depleted stocks to near zero. Canada imposed a fishing moratorium that put 40,000 people out of work. Stocks have still not fully recovered over 30 years later.

💡 Hint

Canadian cod collapse 1992 — moratorium, 40,000 jobs lost.

Card 45process
Question

How should you evaluate solutions to the tragedy of the commons in an exam?

Answer

For each solution, discuss: effectiveness (does it reduce over-use?), enforcement (can it be monitored?), equity (who bears the cost?), and feasibility (political will, international cooperation). Note that no single solution is perfect — combinations often work best.

💡 Hint

Effectiveness, enforcement, equity, feasibility. Combine solutions.

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