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Practical Limitations of Government Intervention on Externalities

The effectiveness of government policies like Pigouvian taxes, regulation, and compensation in addressing externalities is constrained by two key factors. Firstly, there is the challenge of accurately measuring marginal social costs. Similar to the issue in Coasean bargaining, while a firm's private costs are often known, quantifying the broader social costs is difficult. This information gap makes it hard for the government to implement a Pareto-efficient policy or to distribute compensation fairly. Secondly, governments may be influenced by powerful interest groups, resulting in the adoption of policies that, while potentially Pareto-efficient, have unfair distributional consequences.

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Updated 2026-05-02

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