Case Study

Critiquing an Economic Analysis of Externalities

An economic consultant is analyzing a factory whose production creates a negative externality. At the factory's current profit-maximizing output level, the consultant calculates that the first derivative of the total social utility function with respect to output is -50. The consultant concludes that output must be reduced to improve social welfare.

A junior analyst on the team observes that the second derivative of the social utility function at that same output level is also negative, at -5. The junior analyst argues, "Since the second derivative is negative, the downward slope of the utility function is getting steeper as we produce more. To find the peak of the utility function, we should increase output to move towards a point where the curve eventually flattens out (a slope of zero)."

Evaluate the junior analyst's argument. Is their reasoning correct or flawed? Justify your conclusion based on the mathematical meaning of the first and second derivatives in this context.

0

1

Updated 2025-07-22

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

Library Science

Economics

Economy

Introduction to Microeconomics Course

Social Science

Empirical Science

Science

CORE Econ

Related