Understanding Market Failure
- In a free market, the price mechanism determines the most efficient allocation of scarce resources in response to the competing wants and needs in the marketplace
- Scarce resources are the factors of production (land, labour, capital, enterprise)
- Scarce resources are the factors of production (land, labour, capital, enterprise)
- Free markets often work very well
- Sometimes they do not and there is then a less-than-optimum allocation of resources, from the point of view of society. This is called Market Failure
The causes of market failure which lead to a loss of allocative efficiency
- Externalities occur when there is an external impact on a third party not involved in the economic transaction between the buyer and seller e.g. passive smoking is considered to be a negative externality
- These impacts can be positive or negative and are often referred to as spillover effects
- These impacts can be on the production side of the market (producer supply) or on the consumption side of the market (consumer demand)
- Public goods are beneficial to society but would be under-provided by a free market e.g. flood defences
- There is little opportunity for sellers to make profits from providing these goods/services as they are non-excludable and non-rivalrous in consumption
- There is little opportunity for sellers to make profits from providing these goods/services as they are non-excludable and non-rivalrous in consumption
- Common pool resources are resources with no private ownership, they are collectively shared and are finite (used up) in consumption e.g. fishing grounds off the coast of Maine
- These resources are non-excludable
- They are rivalrous (limited in supply)
- From society’s point of view, in each of these cases, there is a lack of efficiency in the allocation of resources
- Sometimes there is an over-provision of goods/services which are harmful (demerit goods) and therefore an over-allocation of the resources (factors of production) used to make these goods/services e.g. cigarettes
- Sometimes there is an under-provision of the goods/services which are beneficial (public goods and merit goods) and therefore an under-allocation of the resources (factors of production) used to make these goods/services e.g. schools
- In the case of common pool resources there is an overuse of a finite resource
- Market failure occurs when there is a lack of allocative efficiency from the point of view of society