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Economics

Submitted by sammer on November 22, 2006

Category: Business
Words: 1989 | Pages: 8
Views: 415
Popularity Rank: 24,466
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Q. Critically discuss the issue of externalities, its implications and how it causes market failure in the economy. What should be the government's role in mitigating this problem?

"The word externalities were created by Arthur Cecil Pigou (1877-1959), which was developed earlier by fellow English economists Henry Sidgwick (1838-1900) and Alfred Marshall (1842-1924) into an important feature of modern economic theory." (1)
In a market economy this generally means that an externality occurs where there is a direct effect of the actions of one person or firm on the welfare of another person or firm in a way which is not transmitted by market prices. This externality can arise from the effects that consumption of an item by one consumer may have on the welfare of others or from the effects that the production of one product may have on the production possibilities of others. As a result, in a competitive market too much or too little of the good will be consumed from the point of view of society.
Two types of externalities exist, positive externalities and negative externalities.
"Positive externalities exist when the marginal social benefit (MSB) of production and or consumption exceeds the marginal private benefit (MPB) i.e. production and/or consumption generate external benefits that may go under-valued by the market. Examples include industrial training by firms, research by companies into new technologies, education and etc." (2)
For instance on 16 Jun 2004, entomologists have described and named over 1,000,000 species of insect. In the UK it was estimated that the value of the pollination services provided by honey bees and bumble bees was around £170 million for outdoor crops (fruit, oil seed rape etc.) and £30 million for greenhouse crops (tomatoes, peppers etc). However, the populations of bees in the UK are in decline. Commercial bee operations have been hit by infestations of a tiny arachnid called the...

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