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Economic Analysis and Public Policy Session 1 Introduction & Overview Christopher Grandy 6/13/11
Purpose of the Course Acquire a working knowledge of economic concepts important to public policy analysis. Explore the process and issues related to economic public policy analysis.  Give you experience: Develop your own  analysis of a public policy issue of interest to you.
Course Overview Syllabus
Readings Main Text:  Weimer and Vining (WV) Articles by  Ronald Coase (Externalities) Christopher Grandy (efficiency) Readings on policy method assigned on: 6/13-14  Information Gathering (Ch. 14) 6/21 Goals-Alternatives (Ch. 15)
Assignments/Grades Project:  Conduct a policy analysis on any issue (but approved by me). First Report due afternoon of June 16. Second Report due afternoon of June 24. Presentation on June 24. Please submit the two reports electronically at grandy@hawaii.edu.
Main Points for This Session Nature of policy analysis What does a policy analysis usually look like?  The Main elements These are the SAME elements you should have in your analysis. Example of Outline of assignment
Main Elements of Policy Analysis  Description of the “problem” Why is government policy necessary?  How have private markets failed? History of past policy responses Policy Goals:  What should we be trying to achieve? Policy Alternatives How do Alternatives compare with respect to goals? Recommendation
Main Elements of Canadian Salmon Fishery Example  Description of the “problem” Fish catches and stocks have declined.  Incomes have fallen.  Threats of elimination of salmon in Canada. Prior analysis indicates large potential net present value of fishing. Why is government policy necessary?  How have private arrangements/markets failed? Open access to fishing areas and difficulty of excluding participants. Public Good problem:  Over use of resource threatens depletion History of past policy responses Early History:  Brief, ineffective attempts to license fishers. “Overcapitalization”:  Too many resources devoted to fishing. Sinclair/Davis Gradually restricting entry through licenses Unsuccessful buy-back of licenses (led to further investment by incumbents). Pearse Commission Suggested tax on salmon catch to lower return and reduce overcapitalization. Buy back and auction licenses. Mifflin Plan Voluntary buy back of licenses. Area licensing—methods of fishing confined to certain areas.
Main Elements of Canadian Salmon Fishery Example(continued) Policy Goals:  What should we be trying to achieve? Efficient use of economic resources. Preservation of fishery. Equitable distribution Current license holders Aboriginal fishers Taxpayers Policy Alternatives:  What might we try? Adopt Pearse Commission proposals Royalty tax (10%) Buy-back of licenses to reduce capacity by 50%. River-Specific Exclusive Ownership Assign fishing rights to single owner for 25 years. Compensate existing owners of fishing licenses. Individual Transferable Quotas Fishers allocated quotas as percentage of estimated total catch. May be transferred (sold) to others. How do Alternatives compare with respect to goals? Table on p. 21 of WV Recommendation Balancing effects on efficiency, fairness and political feasibility:  River-Specific Exclusive Ownership
Notes for Your Project Limitations and Responses Unless already familiar with issue, cannot do extensive literature review. Instead, identify potentially useful literature (list). Unless already familiar with issue, cannot do extensive history Instead, outline major history as you understand it (perhaps as summarized in a previous analysis (cite)). Cannot gather data to do cost/benefit analysis Instead, list the major components of costs and benefits and indicate possible sources of data/information.
Policy Analysis Compared to Other Approaches For comparison, consider possible approaches from other analytical perspectives: Academic research Development of concept of common resource problems Outcome of public decision process as illustration of class power. Policy research Estimating the behavioral response to taxing fishing licenses. Surveying fishers about what compensation is considered acceptable. Classical planning Defining societal goals for fishery (and other natural resources?) and rules for achieving those goals.  “Sustainability” guidelines? Public Administration How to efficiently carry out the mandates of decision-makers (e.g. the legislative process)—Managing the process of moving to exclusive river-specific ownership. How to participate in, as well as support, the public decision-making process and implement its outcomes. Journalism Telling a good story—identifying victims, heroes, and villains in the public decision-making process. Policy Analysis Client-oriented assessment of problems and alternatives with goal of coming to a reasoned recommendation.
A Second Example:Traffic Congestion in Khon Kaen Will use this topic as an example throughout the course. Description of the “problem” Why is government policy necessary?  How have private markets/arrangements failed? History of past policy responses Policy Goals:  What should we be trying to achieve? Policy Alternatives How do Alternatives compare with respect to goals? Recommendation
Next Time Competition & Economic Efficiency Gathering Information for Policy Analysis
Economic Analysis and Public Policy Sessions 2 and 3 Competition & Efficiency Gathering Information Christopher Grandy June 13-14, 2011
Main Points for These Two Sessions Under certain assumptions, competitive markets lead to an “efficient” allocation of resources, and Competitive markets maximize “social surplus” (the sum of consumer and producer surpluses). Under these assumptions there is relatively little role for public policy to improve social welfare.  Several critiques of the efficiency of markets worth considering—especially “coercive” relationships. Ideas for gathering information to do policy analysis.
Efficiency Pareto Efficiency:  An allocation is Pareto Efficient if there is no way to reallocate resources so as to make one person better off without hurting another. “Better off” means that the person would prefer the new allocation to his/her existing allocation.
Illustration of Pareto Efficiency Set of Pareto Efficient Allocations Person B 0 Pad Thai 0 Person A Moo Satay
Competitive Markets & Efficiency Competitive Markets:  People take prices as given (they do not act as though they can affect prices).  Buying and selling in markets at these prices leads to Pareto Efficient allocations of resources. A “price” is a rate of exchange of one good in terms of another (e.g.  A price of ฿30 means you give up 30 baht in exchange for one dish of pad thai.  Or ฿5 for one moo satay.  This implies a price of 6 (moo satay for pad thai), meaning that you give up 6 moo satay in exchange for 1 pad thai). Can think of a price as the slope of a line in our graphs.
Illustration of Competitive Markets & Pareto Efficiency Person B 0 Pad Thai 0 Person A Moo Satay
Bottom Line Because each person is doing as well as s/he can (each is on the highest indifference curve possible) GIVEN the starting position and the price, there is NO role for policy in improving this allocation of resources without hurting one of the participants.
Exercise Get into two groups Read and discuss the instructions for your group, making sure that everyone understands. Do NOT reveal your instructions/information to the other group. Discuss possible trades, exchanges with the other group in an attempt to better your position. You may make more than one exchange.
Consumer Surplus Useful for later discussion to express some of these ideas in terms of supply and demand curves. Look first at demand curves—a relationship between the price of a good and the amount that consumers are willing to purchase. Consumer surplus:  The value that consumers place on a good in excess of the price they pay for it.  Can be represented as the area between the demand curve and the equilibrium price.
Consumer Surplus P0 Q0 Illustration of Consumer Surplus Price D Quantity
Producer Surplus On the producer side, the relationship between price and the amount producers are willing to provide is summarized in the supply curve.  The supply curve can be thought of as the cost of providing different amounts of the good. Producer Surplus:  The value that producers receive in excess of their cost.  This is the area above the supply curve but below the price.
P0 Producer Surplus (also called “rent”) Q0 Illustration of Producer Surplus Price S Quantity
Social Surplus In a particular market, the sum of the two surpluses is called the “social surplus.”  It is a measure of the aggregate benefits to individuals on both sides (buyers and sellers) of the market.
P0 Q0 Illustration of Social Surplus Price S D Quantity
Welfare Implications of a Price Change Either an increase or decrease in price will reduce both consumer and producer surplus relative to an initial position.   The resulting change in social surplus provides a measure of the gain or loss due to the change. Useful in beginning to estimate the desirability of a policy that leads to a change in price.
Loss in Social Surplus (Mainly due to loss in producer surplus) P0 P1 Q1 Q0 Illustration of Change in Social Surplus Due to Price Reduction Price S D Quantity
Point With competitive markets, the equilibrium prices and quantities tend to maximize social surplus.   That equilibrium is a Pareto Efficient point. NOTE:  There are many other Pareto Efficient points, but it will generally be impossible to move from one to another without reducing the welfare of at least one person. Again, given the assumptions of a competitive market, there is no role for policy to unambiguously improve the allocations of goods and services.
Exercise:  How would we use consumer/producer surplus to analyze market for kai satay? What is current price of kai satay? At what price would no one purchase kai satay? What is the cost of supplying kai satay? At what price would no kai satay be supplied? Price Supply Demand Quantity
Role for Government Markets (or, more generally, private arrangements) cannot function without some government (collective action) support: Enforce property rights If it is possible (or not too costly) to simply take property, rather than trade for it, then markets will fail. Enforce contracts Agreements often separated by time—time of delivery of a good or service may differ from time of payment.  If people can violate (renege) on agreements, then no contracts (arrangements/trades) will be made. Laws, police, courts are critical societal institutions that allow markets to function.
Example: Traffic Congestion in Khon Kaen Goal:  To move people and goods efficiently to their destinations. For competitive markets (private arrangements) to appropriately handle traffic: Competitive markets in infrastructure Vehicles No congestion Develop additional infrastructure? Given infrastructure Could markets improve traffic? Everyone with “right” to travel that can be traded?
Project:  Gathering Information Distinction between document research (literature review) and field research (interviews, surveys, etc.) For this course you will mainly rely on document research rather than field research. Use Ch. 14 to help guide you in looking for resources on potential topics for your project. Remember:  Because of limited time, I do NOT require an extensive literature review.  However, try to identify 4-5 important items that seem relevant to your project.
Next Time Market Failures I Public Goods Externalities
Economic Analysis and Public Policy Sessions 4 and 5 Market Failures I: Public Goods & Externalities Christopher Grandy June 14-15, 2011
Main Points for These Sessions One way to start to think about a policy issue is to ask:  Why doesn’t the market allocate this good/service efficiently? Notice that this assumes that markets are a good way to allocate goods. Two important reasons why markets fail to allocate resources well: Public Goods Externalities Implied Roles for Policy
Rivalry and Excludability Two characteristics of many goods and services that make them well-suited to allocation by the market. Rivalry:  One person’s consumption reduces the amount available for another person to consume.   For example, clothing, housing, food, computers, and so on. Prevents possibility that a person consume a good that another person  pays for and consumes (“free riding”).  Excludability:  Relatively easy to prevent someone from consuming the good/service.   For example, attempting to take any of the items above from a store without paying will lead to arrest. Assures that a private supplier will be paid. ,[object Object],[object Object]
Public Goods: Type IRivalry & Nonexcludability Fresh Water:  We all need water to live, so there is potentially a huge market for it.   Water is rivalrous:  My consumption of a certain quantity of water reduces the amount available for someone else to consume. Water flowing in a river or underground is nonexcludable:  In general, it is difficult or impossible to prevent someone from consuming such water. ,[object Object],[object Object]
Potential Policy ResponsePublic Goods: Type IRivalry & Nonexcludability Charge a per unit tax that equals the difference between MPC and MSC. This raises the MPC curve to coincide with the MSC curve. Leads people to account for their effects on the total supply—and so, to conserve. MSC Tax MPC PS PP D QP QS
Type I Public Good (R, NE) as Prisoner’s Dilemma Household 2 Do Not Conserve Conserve 80 110 100 100 Conserve Household 1 110 80 90 90 Do Not Conserve Two households sharing a single well. If both cooperate and conserve water, then each gets 100 Utils (measure of utility (“happiness”)). If one conserves while other does not; conserver gets 80 Utils and non-conserver gets 110 Utils. If neither conserves, then each gets 90 Utils. “Do Not Conserve” is a “dominant strategy” for each player. Socially optimal result is Conserve. Nash Equilibrium is Do Not Conserve.
Public Goods: Type IINonrivalry & Excludability Consider a toll road (without congestion): Nonrivalrous:  In the absence of congestion, your consumption of the road does not reduce the amount that is available for others to consume. Excludable:  Access to the road only available if toll paid—preventing consumption. Because it doesn’t cost any more to supply another person (no congestion), the marginal price of the lecture “should be” zero.  But at that price no one would be willing to supply it. If a positive price is charged, then there is underconsumption of the road—another traveler could use the road at no additional cost.
Two Notes on Nonrivalry Leads to a distinction between the cost of supplying an additional person versus the cost of supplying an additional unit of the good. With a private good (rival and excludable), in order to supply an additional person with the good, one must supply an additional unit of the good. With a nonrival good, the same quantity can supply many people.  So, an additional person can be supplied at no additional cost. Requires a different method of moving from individual to market demand. With a rival good, we sum over quantity With a nonrival good, we sum over price
Market Demand for Rival and Nonrival Goods Market Demand is the vertical sum (over price) of individual demand Market Demand is the horizontal sum (over quantity) of individual demand D D D1 D2 D1 D2 Rivalrous Good Nonrival Good P P Q Q
Public Goods: Type IINonrivalry & Excludability When toll road is not congested, supply exceeds demand at a zero price.  Everyone can travel for free. But how is the toll road paid for? Charge a toll and accept underconsumption?  Tax everyone & allow all to travel?  Toll S D 0 Number of Travelers
Public Goods: Type IINonrivalry & Excludability w/ Congestion At some point, each additional traveler imposes costs on others.    A fee reflecting those costs may be appropriate. But this does NOT solve the problem of how to pay for toll road itself. S Toll P0 D 0 Number of Travelers
Public Goods: Type IIINonrivalry & Nonexcludability Fireworks Display Nonrivalrous:  Ignoring congestion, one person’s watching the display does not reduce the amount available to others. Nonexcludable:  Cannot prevent someone from looking at the sky and watching the display. At a positive price, there is underconsumption. Because of nonexcludability, no one is willing to supply the good.
Public Goods: Type IIINonrivalry & Nonexcludability tax ,[object Object]
If knew each person’s individual demand, then could charge individual prices.
Since we don’t know individual demand, could tax to supply the good.
But then some people will be unhappy
D1 doesn’t want any of the good
D3 would want much morePrice Supply Total Demand D3 D2 D1 Q* Fireworks
Exercise Determine whether the following are public goods and, if so, what kind [(R, NE), (NR, E), (NR, NE)]: Information from an online search engine   Transportation on a train  Fresh air Movie in a theatre Opihi (small, edible shellfish collected on the shore) Tsunami warning system The beach Bridge across river Petroleum in the ground
Example: Traffic Congestion A congested road possibly the result of an initial Type III public good (nonrival and nonexcludable). A newly-built road likely to have enough capacity for all current users.  Thus, nonrival:  one person’s use of the road does not reduce the amount available to another (measured in terms of transit time). With multiple, public accesses, the road is effectively nonexcludable—difficult, or impossible, to prevent additional travelers. Over time, as population grows and/or economy develops, the road becomes congested.  Now the road is Type I (rival, nonexcludable). Converting the road to a toll road is one option—excludability can reduce congestion. In New York City (Manhattan) 20 years ago, flat toll to drive into city across George Washington Bridge. Today, time-of-day pricing:  $8 (฿240) during peak hours and $6 (฿180) during non-peak hours.
Externalities A divergence between private and social characteristics of a market: A negative externality involves a divergence between private and social cost.  Implies overproduction of the good/service. Pollution from a manufacturing facility. A positive externality involves a divergence between private and social benefits.  Implies underproduction of the good/service. Educating children and socialization.
Negative Externality: Manufacturing w/ pollution side-effect ,[object Object]
Too much is produced if the firm utilizes MPC.
May force the firm (or consumers) to bear the cost by imposing a tax on the manufactured good.Price MSC  (including costs of pollution) MPC  (excluding costs of pollution) Demand Qp Q* Quantity of Manufactured Goods

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Session(รวม) sum11[1]

  • 1. Economic Analysis and Public Policy Session 1 Introduction & Overview Christopher Grandy 6/13/11
  • 2.
  • 3. Purpose of the Course Acquire a working knowledge of economic concepts important to public policy analysis. Explore the process and issues related to economic public policy analysis. Give you experience: Develop your own analysis of a public policy issue of interest to you.
  • 5. Readings Main Text: Weimer and Vining (WV) Articles by Ronald Coase (Externalities) Christopher Grandy (efficiency) Readings on policy method assigned on: 6/13-14 Information Gathering (Ch. 14) 6/21 Goals-Alternatives (Ch. 15)
  • 6. Assignments/Grades Project: Conduct a policy analysis on any issue (but approved by me). First Report due afternoon of June 16. Second Report due afternoon of June 24. Presentation on June 24. Please submit the two reports electronically at grandy@hawaii.edu.
  • 7. Main Points for This Session Nature of policy analysis What does a policy analysis usually look like? The Main elements These are the SAME elements you should have in your analysis. Example of Outline of assignment
  • 8. Main Elements of Policy Analysis Description of the “problem” Why is government policy necessary? How have private markets failed? History of past policy responses Policy Goals: What should we be trying to achieve? Policy Alternatives How do Alternatives compare with respect to goals? Recommendation
  • 9. Main Elements of Canadian Salmon Fishery Example Description of the “problem” Fish catches and stocks have declined. Incomes have fallen. Threats of elimination of salmon in Canada. Prior analysis indicates large potential net present value of fishing. Why is government policy necessary? How have private arrangements/markets failed? Open access to fishing areas and difficulty of excluding participants. Public Good problem: Over use of resource threatens depletion History of past policy responses Early History: Brief, ineffective attempts to license fishers. “Overcapitalization”: Too many resources devoted to fishing. Sinclair/Davis Gradually restricting entry through licenses Unsuccessful buy-back of licenses (led to further investment by incumbents). Pearse Commission Suggested tax on salmon catch to lower return and reduce overcapitalization. Buy back and auction licenses. Mifflin Plan Voluntary buy back of licenses. Area licensing—methods of fishing confined to certain areas.
  • 10. Main Elements of Canadian Salmon Fishery Example(continued) Policy Goals: What should we be trying to achieve? Efficient use of economic resources. Preservation of fishery. Equitable distribution Current license holders Aboriginal fishers Taxpayers Policy Alternatives: What might we try? Adopt Pearse Commission proposals Royalty tax (10%) Buy-back of licenses to reduce capacity by 50%. River-Specific Exclusive Ownership Assign fishing rights to single owner for 25 years. Compensate existing owners of fishing licenses. Individual Transferable Quotas Fishers allocated quotas as percentage of estimated total catch. May be transferred (sold) to others. How do Alternatives compare with respect to goals? Table on p. 21 of WV Recommendation Balancing effects on efficiency, fairness and political feasibility: River-Specific Exclusive Ownership
  • 11. Notes for Your Project Limitations and Responses Unless already familiar with issue, cannot do extensive literature review. Instead, identify potentially useful literature (list). Unless already familiar with issue, cannot do extensive history Instead, outline major history as you understand it (perhaps as summarized in a previous analysis (cite)). Cannot gather data to do cost/benefit analysis Instead, list the major components of costs and benefits and indicate possible sources of data/information.
  • 12. Policy Analysis Compared to Other Approaches For comparison, consider possible approaches from other analytical perspectives: Academic research Development of concept of common resource problems Outcome of public decision process as illustration of class power. Policy research Estimating the behavioral response to taxing fishing licenses. Surveying fishers about what compensation is considered acceptable. Classical planning Defining societal goals for fishery (and other natural resources?) and rules for achieving those goals. “Sustainability” guidelines? Public Administration How to efficiently carry out the mandates of decision-makers (e.g. the legislative process)—Managing the process of moving to exclusive river-specific ownership. How to participate in, as well as support, the public decision-making process and implement its outcomes. Journalism Telling a good story—identifying victims, heroes, and villains in the public decision-making process. Policy Analysis Client-oriented assessment of problems and alternatives with goal of coming to a reasoned recommendation.
  • 13. A Second Example:Traffic Congestion in Khon Kaen Will use this topic as an example throughout the course. Description of the “problem” Why is government policy necessary? How have private markets/arrangements failed? History of past policy responses Policy Goals: What should we be trying to achieve? Policy Alternatives How do Alternatives compare with respect to goals? Recommendation
  • 14. Next Time Competition & Economic Efficiency Gathering Information for Policy Analysis
  • 15. Economic Analysis and Public Policy Sessions 2 and 3 Competition & Efficiency Gathering Information Christopher Grandy June 13-14, 2011
  • 16. Main Points for These Two Sessions Under certain assumptions, competitive markets lead to an “efficient” allocation of resources, and Competitive markets maximize “social surplus” (the sum of consumer and producer surpluses). Under these assumptions there is relatively little role for public policy to improve social welfare. Several critiques of the efficiency of markets worth considering—especially “coercive” relationships. Ideas for gathering information to do policy analysis.
  • 17. Efficiency Pareto Efficiency: An allocation is Pareto Efficient if there is no way to reallocate resources so as to make one person better off without hurting another. “Better off” means that the person would prefer the new allocation to his/her existing allocation.
  • 18. Illustration of Pareto Efficiency Set of Pareto Efficient Allocations Person B 0 Pad Thai 0 Person A Moo Satay
  • 19. Competitive Markets & Efficiency Competitive Markets: People take prices as given (they do not act as though they can affect prices). Buying and selling in markets at these prices leads to Pareto Efficient allocations of resources. A “price” is a rate of exchange of one good in terms of another (e.g. A price of ฿30 means you give up 30 baht in exchange for one dish of pad thai. Or ฿5 for one moo satay. This implies a price of 6 (moo satay for pad thai), meaning that you give up 6 moo satay in exchange for 1 pad thai). Can think of a price as the slope of a line in our graphs.
  • 20. Illustration of Competitive Markets & Pareto Efficiency Person B 0 Pad Thai 0 Person A Moo Satay
  • 21. Bottom Line Because each person is doing as well as s/he can (each is on the highest indifference curve possible) GIVEN the starting position and the price, there is NO role for policy in improving this allocation of resources without hurting one of the participants.
  • 22. Exercise Get into two groups Read and discuss the instructions for your group, making sure that everyone understands. Do NOT reveal your instructions/information to the other group. Discuss possible trades, exchanges with the other group in an attempt to better your position. You may make more than one exchange.
  • 23. Consumer Surplus Useful for later discussion to express some of these ideas in terms of supply and demand curves. Look first at demand curves—a relationship between the price of a good and the amount that consumers are willing to purchase. Consumer surplus: The value that consumers place on a good in excess of the price they pay for it. Can be represented as the area between the demand curve and the equilibrium price.
  • 24. Consumer Surplus P0 Q0 Illustration of Consumer Surplus Price D Quantity
  • 25. Producer Surplus On the producer side, the relationship between price and the amount producers are willing to provide is summarized in the supply curve. The supply curve can be thought of as the cost of providing different amounts of the good. Producer Surplus: The value that producers receive in excess of their cost. This is the area above the supply curve but below the price.
  • 26. P0 Producer Surplus (also called “rent”) Q0 Illustration of Producer Surplus Price S Quantity
  • 27. Social Surplus In a particular market, the sum of the two surpluses is called the “social surplus.” It is a measure of the aggregate benefits to individuals on both sides (buyers and sellers) of the market.
  • 28. P0 Q0 Illustration of Social Surplus Price S D Quantity
  • 29. Welfare Implications of a Price Change Either an increase or decrease in price will reduce both consumer and producer surplus relative to an initial position. The resulting change in social surplus provides a measure of the gain or loss due to the change. Useful in beginning to estimate the desirability of a policy that leads to a change in price.
  • 30. Loss in Social Surplus (Mainly due to loss in producer surplus) P0 P1 Q1 Q0 Illustration of Change in Social Surplus Due to Price Reduction Price S D Quantity
  • 31. Point With competitive markets, the equilibrium prices and quantities tend to maximize social surplus. That equilibrium is a Pareto Efficient point. NOTE: There are many other Pareto Efficient points, but it will generally be impossible to move from one to another without reducing the welfare of at least one person. Again, given the assumptions of a competitive market, there is no role for policy to unambiguously improve the allocations of goods and services.
  • 32. Exercise: How would we use consumer/producer surplus to analyze market for kai satay? What is current price of kai satay? At what price would no one purchase kai satay? What is the cost of supplying kai satay? At what price would no kai satay be supplied? Price Supply Demand Quantity
  • 33. Role for Government Markets (or, more generally, private arrangements) cannot function without some government (collective action) support: Enforce property rights If it is possible (or not too costly) to simply take property, rather than trade for it, then markets will fail. Enforce contracts Agreements often separated by time—time of delivery of a good or service may differ from time of payment. If people can violate (renege) on agreements, then no contracts (arrangements/trades) will be made. Laws, police, courts are critical societal institutions that allow markets to function.
  • 34. Example: Traffic Congestion in Khon Kaen Goal: To move people and goods efficiently to their destinations. For competitive markets (private arrangements) to appropriately handle traffic: Competitive markets in infrastructure Vehicles No congestion Develop additional infrastructure? Given infrastructure Could markets improve traffic? Everyone with “right” to travel that can be traded?
  • 35. Project: Gathering Information Distinction between document research (literature review) and field research (interviews, surveys, etc.) For this course you will mainly rely on document research rather than field research. Use Ch. 14 to help guide you in looking for resources on potential topics for your project. Remember: Because of limited time, I do NOT require an extensive literature review. However, try to identify 4-5 important items that seem relevant to your project.
  • 36. Next Time Market Failures I Public Goods Externalities
  • 37. Economic Analysis and Public Policy Sessions 4 and 5 Market Failures I: Public Goods & Externalities Christopher Grandy June 14-15, 2011
  • 38. Main Points for These Sessions One way to start to think about a policy issue is to ask: Why doesn’t the market allocate this good/service efficiently? Notice that this assumes that markets are a good way to allocate goods. Two important reasons why markets fail to allocate resources well: Public Goods Externalities Implied Roles for Policy
  • 39.
  • 40.
  • 41. Potential Policy ResponsePublic Goods: Type IRivalry & Nonexcludability Charge a per unit tax that equals the difference between MPC and MSC. This raises the MPC curve to coincide with the MSC curve. Leads people to account for their effects on the total supply—and so, to conserve. MSC Tax MPC PS PP D QP QS
  • 42. Type I Public Good (R, NE) as Prisoner’s Dilemma Household 2 Do Not Conserve Conserve 80 110 100 100 Conserve Household 1 110 80 90 90 Do Not Conserve Two households sharing a single well. If both cooperate and conserve water, then each gets 100 Utils (measure of utility (“happiness”)). If one conserves while other does not; conserver gets 80 Utils and non-conserver gets 110 Utils. If neither conserves, then each gets 90 Utils. “Do Not Conserve” is a “dominant strategy” for each player. Socially optimal result is Conserve. Nash Equilibrium is Do Not Conserve.
  • 43. Public Goods: Type IINonrivalry & Excludability Consider a toll road (without congestion): Nonrivalrous: In the absence of congestion, your consumption of the road does not reduce the amount that is available for others to consume. Excludable: Access to the road only available if toll paid—preventing consumption. Because it doesn’t cost any more to supply another person (no congestion), the marginal price of the lecture “should be” zero. But at that price no one would be willing to supply it. If a positive price is charged, then there is underconsumption of the road—another traveler could use the road at no additional cost.
  • 44. Two Notes on Nonrivalry Leads to a distinction between the cost of supplying an additional person versus the cost of supplying an additional unit of the good. With a private good (rival and excludable), in order to supply an additional person with the good, one must supply an additional unit of the good. With a nonrival good, the same quantity can supply many people. So, an additional person can be supplied at no additional cost. Requires a different method of moving from individual to market demand. With a rival good, we sum over quantity With a nonrival good, we sum over price
  • 45. Market Demand for Rival and Nonrival Goods Market Demand is the vertical sum (over price) of individual demand Market Demand is the horizontal sum (over quantity) of individual demand D D D1 D2 D1 D2 Rivalrous Good Nonrival Good P P Q Q
  • 46. Public Goods: Type IINonrivalry & Excludability When toll road is not congested, supply exceeds demand at a zero price. Everyone can travel for free. But how is the toll road paid for? Charge a toll and accept underconsumption? Tax everyone & allow all to travel? Toll S D 0 Number of Travelers
  • 47. Public Goods: Type IINonrivalry & Excludability w/ Congestion At some point, each additional traveler imposes costs on others. A fee reflecting those costs may be appropriate. But this does NOT solve the problem of how to pay for toll road itself. S Toll P0 D 0 Number of Travelers
  • 48. Public Goods: Type IIINonrivalry & Nonexcludability Fireworks Display Nonrivalrous: Ignoring congestion, one person’s watching the display does not reduce the amount available to others. Nonexcludable: Cannot prevent someone from looking at the sky and watching the display. At a positive price, there is underconsumption. Because of nonexcludability, no one is willing to supply the good.
  • 49.
  • 50. If knew each person’s individual demand, then could charge individual prices.
  • 51. Since we don’t know individual demand, could tax to supply the good.
  • 52. But then some people will be unhappy
  • 53. D1 doesn’t want any of the good
  • 54. D3 would want much morePrice Supply Total Demand D3 D2 D1 Q* Fireworks
  • 55. Exercise Determine whether the following are public goods and, if so, what kind [(R, NE), (NR, E), (NR, NE)]: Information from an online search engine Transportation on a train Fresh air Movie in a theatre Opihi (small, edible shellfish collected on the shore) Tsunami warning system The beach Bridge across river Petroleum in the ground
  • 56. Example: Traffic Congestion A congested road possibly the result of an initial Type III public good (nonrival and nonexcludable). A newly-built road likely to have enough capacity for all current users. Thus, nonrival: one person’s use of the road does not reduce the amount available to another (measured in terms of transit time). With multiple, public accesses, the road is effectively nonexcludable—difficult, or impossible, to prevent additional travelers. Over time, as population grows and/or economy develops, the road becomes congested. Now the road is Type I (rival, nonexcludable). Converting the road to a toll road is one option—excludability can reduce congestion. In New York City (Manhattan) 20 years ago, flat toll to drive into city across George Washington Bridge. Today, time-of-day pricing: $8 (฿240) during peak hours and $6 (฿180) during non-peak hours.
  • 57. Externalities A divergence between private and social characteristics of a market: A negative externality involves a divergence between private and social cost. Implies overproduction of the good/service. Pollution from a manufacturing facility. A positive externality involves a divergence between private and social benefits. Implies underproduction of the good/service. Educating children and socialization.
  • 58.
  • 59. Too much is produced if the firm utilizes MPC.
  • 60. May force the firm (or consumers) to bear the cost by imposing a tax on the manufactured good.Price MSC (including costs of pollution) MPC (excluding costs of pollution) Demand Qp Q* Quantity of Manufactured Goods
  • 61. Positive Externality: Education If parents only pay attention to the benefits to them of educating their child, then they are on the Marginal Private Benefit curve, and will choose education level E0. However, if education has positive socialization effects (encouraging cooperation, less violence, etc.), then there are benefits which accrue to others. And MSB is the relevant curve. The optimal level of education is then E*. The parents don’t spend enough on education at E0. May justify public subsidies for education. P S MSB MPB Education E0 E*
  • 62. Externalities & the Coase Theorem Ronald Coase won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1991—in part, for work which has become known as the Coase Theorem. Suppose that a farmer and a cattle rancher operate in close proximity to one another so that occasionally straying cattle will trample some of the crops. This can be viewed as a negative externality between producers. Traditionally this has been seen as a situation in which government policy must address the issue—perhaps by imposing a tax on cattle production. Coase’s insight: The farmer and the cattle rancher could negotiate a solution—(1) the farmer could pay the cattle rancher to raise fewer cows, (2) the rancher could pay the farmer to plant elsewhere, (3) the two could share the cost of a fence, etc. Moreover, Coase argued that the pattern of planting and cattle raising would be the same regardless of the solution negotiated. Indeed, the pattern would be the same irrespective of whether the farmer had the “right” to be free from cattle or the cattle rancher had the right to allow foraging. The “trick” is that the two have an incentive to maximize “joint production.” Solution requires low “transaction costs”—the costs associated with bargaining and coming to an agreement.
  • 63. Exercise: Which of the following are externalities? Neighbor paints house (nice color) Neighbor allows tree to grow, obstructing view To reduce global warming, national government joins international treaty committing to end use of petroleum products by 2025. New technology for making clothing puts professional tailors out of business.
  • 64. Example: Traffic Congestion On a congested road, each additional traveler imposes an external cost on the travelers behind. Person decides whether to travel based on cost to him/her—including delays from congestion ahead. But typically fails to see cost he/she imposes on those behind. Imposing a toll can “internalize” the negative externality. Other negative externalities from traffic: Air pollution in the local neighborhood. Noise pollution. CO2 emissions—global warming.
  • 65. Next Time Market Failures II Natural Monopoly Asymmetric Information Other Problems with Markets