π± What Are Positive Externalities?
Definition: A positive externality occurs when production or consumption creates a benefit that is not captured in the market price.
Two types
- Positive externality of consumption β the consumer's action benefits others (e.g. getting vaccinated protects those around you β herd immunity).
- Positive externality of production β the firm's activity benefits others (e.g. a tech company's R&D creates knowledge spillovers used by other firms).
Key benefit concepts
- MPB β shown by the demand curve.
- MSB β lies above MPB when there is a positive externality of consumption.
- External benefit = MSB β MPB β the gap represents the benefit to society that the consumer doesn't capture.
For a positive externality of production, focus on the cost side: MSC lies below MPC because the social cost is lower than the private cost (the firm creates a positive spillover that reduces costs for society).
π Under-Provision and Welfare Loss
When the market ignores external benefits, too little of the good is produced or consumed. The gap between the market quantity and the socially optimal quantity represents a welfare loss β society misses out on benefits it could have enjoyed.
Positive externality of consumption (diagram)
- Demand = MPB β the private benefit curve.
- MSB β above MPB by the amount of the external benefit.
- Supply = MPC = MSC (no externality on the production side).
- Market equilibrium: MPB = MPC β quantity Qm (under-consumption).
- Social optimum: MSB = MSC β quantity Qopt (more output).
- Welfare loss = triangle between MSB and MPC from Qm to Qopt.
For a positive externality of production: MSC lies below MPC. Market produces at MPC = MPB β Qm. Social optimum at MSC = MSB β Qopt. Welfare-loss triangle sits between MPC and MSC from Qm to Qopt.
The welfare-loss triangle for positive externalities sits to the left of market equilibrium (Qm < Qopt), while for negative externalities it sits to the right (Qm > Qopt). This pattern helps you check your diagram.
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π οΈ Corrective Policies for Positive Externalities
Governments want to increase quantity toward the social optimum. Here are the main tools:
1. Subsidies
A subsidy equal to the external benefit shifts MPC down to MSC (production externality) or effectively raises the benefit consumers receive. If set perfectly, it closes the gap between Qm and Qopt.
2. Government direct provision
The government may provide the good itself (e.g. public healthcare, free education). This guarantees access but can be expensive and may suffer from inefficiency.
3. Legislation
Compulsory rules can increase consumption (e.g. mandatory schooling, compulsory vaccinations in some countries). Effective but limits individual freedom.
4. Advertising and information
Government campaigns can inform consumers of the full benefits (e.g. promoting vaccination). Shifts MPB toward MSB. Slow but non-coercive.
Real-world example: Many governments subsidise renewable-energy installation. Solar panel subsidies encourage households to switch, reducing carbon emissions (a positive externality of consumption for society).