A company manufactures fertilizer in a competitive market. The production process releases chemical runoff into a local river, which negatively impacts the downstream fishing industry. The company does not compensate the fishing industry for this damage. In this market, the equilibrium quantity is determined where the private marginal cost of production equals the price. How does this market equilibrium quantity compare to the Pareto efficient quantity?
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
Ch.8 Supply and demand: Markets with many buyers and sellers - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.10 Market successes and failures: The societal effects of private decisions - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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Condition for Market Efficiency: Complete Contracts
A large-scale bakery operates in a competitive market, selling bread to local consumers. The bakery's ovens release a pleasant aroma that significantly increases the foot traffic and sales for a neighboring café. The café owner does not pay the bakery for this benefit. Assuming the bread market is in equilibrium, which statement best analyzes this situation from an efficiency standpoint?
Market Efficiency and External Effects
Explaining Inefficiency from External Effects
A chemical factory operates in a perfectly competitive market and produces at a level where its private marginal cost equals the market price. If the factory's production process pollutes a nearby river, harming the local fishing industry, the market outcome is still considered Pareto efficient because the factory itself is operating at its profit-maximizing equilibrium.
Evaluating Market Outcomes with Positive Externalities
Match each market scenario with the most accurate description of its efficiency, considering only the information provided.
Analyzing Reciprocal Externalities
For a competitive market outcome to be considered Pareto efficient, the economic activities of buyers and sellers must not create significant, uncompensated effects on third parties. These effects are known as ____.
An economist is analyzing a competitive market for a product whose manufacturing process creates a side effect for people who are not involved in buying or selling the product. Arrange the following steps in the logical order the economist would follow to determine if the market's outcome is Pareto efficient.
A company manufactures fertilizer in a competitive market. The production process releases chemical runoff into a local river, which negatively impacts the downstream fishing industry. The company does not compensate the fishing industry for this damage. In this market, the equilibrium quantity is determined where the private marginal cost of production equals the price. How does this market equilibrium quantity compare to the Pareto efficient quantity?
External Effect (Externality) Definition
Price Signals in Markets With and Without Externalities