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Chapter 16 Introduction to welfare economics

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The branch of economics dealing with normative issues. ... e.g. a chemical firm discharges waste into a lake & ruins the fishing for anglers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 16 Introduction to welfare economics


1
Chapter 16Introduction to welfare economics
  • David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger
    Dornbusch, Economics,
  • 6th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2000
  • Power Point presentation by Peter Smith

2
Welfare economics
  • The branch of economics dealing with normative
    issues.
  • Its purpose is not to describe how the economy
    works
  • but to assess how well it works.

3
Equity and efficiency
  • Horizontal equity
  • the identical treatment of identical people
  • Vertical equity
  • the different treatment of different people in
    order to reduce the consequences of their innate
    differences

4
Pareto efficiency
  • An allocation is Pareto-efficient for a given set
    of consumer tastes, resources and technology, if
    it is impossible to move to another allocation
    which would make some people better off and
    nobody worse off.

5
Perfect competition and Pareto efficiency
  • If every market in the economy is a perfectly
    competitive free market, the resulting
    equilibrium throughout the economy will be
    Pareto-efficient.
  • As expressed in Adam Smiths notion of the
    Invisible Hand.

6
Competitive equilibrium and Pareto-efficiency
  • At any output such as Q1, the last film must
    yield consumers P1 extra utility.
  • The supply curve for the competitive film
    industry (SS) is the marginal cost of films.
  • Away from P1, Q1, there is a divergence between
    the marginal cost and the marginal benefit
    derived by consumers
  • so a move to that position makes society better
    off.

D
SS
Price of films
P1
D
Q1
Quantity of films
7
Distortions
  • A distortion exists whenever societys marginal
    cost of producing a good does not equal societys
    marginal benefit from consuming that good.
  • Some such distortions may be inevitable
  • and it may be more efficient to spread such
    distortion over a wide range of markets, rather
    than concentrating it in one market
  • this results from the theory of the second-best

8
Market failure
  • occurs when equilibrium in free unregulated
    markets will fail to achieve an efficient
    allocation.
  • Imperfect competition
  • Social priorities (e.g. equity)
  • Externalities
  • Other missing markets
  • future goods, risk, information.

9
Externalities
  • An externality arises whenever an individuals
    production or consumption decision directly
    affects the production or consumption of others
  • other than through market prices
  • e.g. a chemical firm discharges waste into a lake
    ruins the fishing for anglers

10
A production externality
Price
Quantity
11
A production externality
12
A consumption externality
E.g. neighbours may benefit from a well-kept
garden.
A consumption externality may cause marginal
social benefit to diverge from marginal private
benefit.
If MSBgtMPB, then the free market
equilibrium provides the quantity Q.
13
Greenhouse gases
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