MARKET FAILURE
Sources of Market Failure
Market failure is said to occur when free markets, operating without any government intervention. Fail to deliver a socially efficient allocation of resources to produce goods and services.
There are few reasons why Market Failure occurs:
1. Externalities
2. Failure to provide Public Goods
3. Imperfect Competition
4. Imperfect Information
5. Immobility of factors of production
1. Externalities
Externalities are costs or benefits from production or consumption experienced by society but not by the producers or consumer themselves, not accounted for by the price mechanism. Externalities effects can be either positive or negative.
Private and External Costs
· Private costs are costs that are incurred by the one who undertakes an economic activity. Ex: those costs that you pay in order to obtain something.
· External costs are costs incurred by third parties due to the economic activities of someone else. Ex: The passive smokers.
Private and External Benefits
· Private benefits are those benefits that are incurred by the one undertaking an economic activity. Ex: the private benefit of getting better after visiting a doctor.
· External benefits are those benefits that third parties enjoy from the economic activity of someone else. Ex: The fact that others didn’t get sick because you visited the doctor is an external benefit.
The sum of these costs and benefits are called social costs and benefits.
Negative Externalities
This happens when the price mechanism fails to bring about a socially efficient allocation of resources in this case. This is because the cost to society in terms of deterioration of the environment is unpriced by the price mechanism and therefore is not included in the private costs of production.
Positive Externalities
The analysis of positive externalities is similar to the analysis of negative externalities. Once again, the price mechanism fails to bring about a socially efficient of allocation of resources. This is because the benefit to society in terms of reducing the risk of others getting influenced is unpriced by the price mechanism and therefore is not included in the private benefit.
In conclusion, negative externalities lead market to produce a larger quantity than is socially desirable. Positive externalities lead markets to produce a smaller quantity than is socially desirable. In other words, externalities result in partial market failure.
Merit goods are goods or services that have been deemed socially desirable and under-consume through the political process, by the government.
Demerit goods are goods or services that have been deemed socially undesirable and over-consume through the political process –their undesirability is usually due to external costs imposed on society when consumed.
2. Failure to provide Public Goods
Public goods not provided by the free market because of their two main characteristics:
· Non-excludability where it is not possible to provide a good or service to one person without it thereby being available for others to enjoy.
· Non-rivalry where the consumption of a good or service by one person will not prevent others from enjoying it.
Examples: Street lighting, lighthouse protection, police services, air defense systems, roads, terrestrial television, flood defense systems, public parks and beaches.
Because of their nature the private sector is unlikely to be willing and able to provide public goods. The government therefore provides them for collective consumption and finances them through general taxation.
Since it is not possible to exclude those who do not pay from consuming the good, no one has the incentive to pay what the good really is worth to them. A free-rider is anyone who receives the benefits from a good or service without having to pay for it. Hence, despite the fact that a pure public good yields valuable benefits to society, the free-rider problem means that the market will not provide such a good.
In conclusion, the non-excludability and non-rivalry characteristics of public goods result in complete market failure because the market fails to produce such goods.
3. Imperfect Competition
A sole producer (monopolist) of a good or service which has no close substitutes may use market dominance to raise the price of a good by reducing its output. A few producers (oligopolist) may collude to raise price of a product by restricting output. This act of reducing output to raise the price of a good contributes to market failure since there are no allocative efficiency in production as in perfect competition.
4. Imperfect Information
Imperfect information arises due to:
§ One side of the market (either buyers/sellers) having better information than the other, commonly known as Asymmetric Information.
§ Uninformed buyers and knowledgeable sellers (doctor and patient)
§ Uninformed sellers and knowledgeable buyers (Insurance and their clients)
§ Low frequency of consumption, a lack of experience
§ Complex products that are difficult for the typical consumer to evaluate knowledgeably
§ Conflict between consumer and producer interest (cigarettes)
How does imperfect information cause market failure?
§ In an efficient market, both buyers and sellers have good knowledge of the product in order to make rational decisions that equate marginal benefits to marginal costs.
§ When imperfect information exist, buyers and sellers are prevented from achieving the efficient outcome. The inefficient allocation of resources leads to welfare loss.
5. Immobility of factors of production (resources)
v Resources cannot respond to incentives to produce goods and services according to the consumers’ demands
v The greater the immobility of factors of production, the more difficult it is for markets to achieve allocative efficiency
Labour-Occupational Immobility: Missmatch of skill-> leads to a waste of resources and represents market failure because social welfare is not being maximized.
Labour-Geographical Immobility: Geographical immobility exists in large countries when there are barriers to people moving from one region to another in search of jobs
Capital Immobility: Certain capital goods are difficult to transfer from one use to another (a train once built is only useful as a train). For another capital goods, it is difficult to transfer it from a geographical location to another (Apetrochemical plant built in Tangerang, Indonesia cannot be easily uprooted and transferred to the US.
CORRECTING MARKET FAILURE
Government Intervention
Government intervene markets in attempt to correct market failure. There is a high risk of market failure in a free market and that government action (Taxation and Subsidies) can counter these risks, leading to a more socially efficient outcome.
Taxes
· A charge placed on the production of a good and service by the government
· A tax will increase the cost of production to the producer
· It is likely that the producer will produce less therefore the supply curve shifts to the left
· The government might force the firm to pay a fee.
Subsidy
· A benefit given by the government to groups or individuals usually in the form of a cash payment or tax reduction. The subsidy is usually given to remove some type of burden and is often considered to be in the interest of the public.
· Used to help redistribute income
· Used to help firms compete
· Increases output – market failure is perceived as a lack of output
· Long term effects on market – distorts price signals
· EXAMPLES: state benefits, free school meals, working tax credits, agriculture, transport, regional development, housing, employment, education