3.3 — The Static Benefits of Markets: Welfare Economics & Market Failure — Class Content

Meeting Dates

Section 1: Monday, November 7, 2022

Section 2: Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Overview

Today we consider how markets work and why (and when) they are so efficient at allocating resources and solving social problems. We take a crack at defining efficiency in a few ways: allocative, productive, Pareto, and Kaldor-Hicks efficiency. We then discuss Welfare Economics and I summarize three conditions about when markets are good & efficient: 1. Markets are competitive 2. Markets reach equilibrium 3. Markets do not have externalities

This leads us into a discussion of market failure, when markets aren’t efficient because something prevents the price system from working properly. We talk about several types of market failures: collective action problems, public goods, and externalities.

Readings

  • Ch. 14.2-14.7, Ch. 16 in Goolsbee, Levitt, and Syverson, 2019

Your textbook does cover efficiency and welfare economics in Chapter 14, in the context of general equilibrium theory, which is a bit too advanced for us to spend sufficient time to cover. Thus, I would not recommend reading that chapter unless you are prepared to dive into new tools (Edgeworth diagrams, production possibilities frontiers) that I will not cover in this course.

Chapter 16, however, is a pretty accessible discussion of externalities and public goods.

Optional/Recommended Reading

The following Wikipedia entries can also provide more background on today’s concepts (which are well known and standard among economists):

On Efficiency & Welfare:

On Market Failures (and their Solutions):

Slides

Below, you can find the slides in two formats. Clicking the image will bring you to the html version of the slides in a new tab. The lower button will allow you to download a PDF version of the slides.

Tip

You can type h to see a special list of viewing options, and type o for an outline view of all the slides.

I suggest printing the slides beforehand and using them to take additional notes in class (not everything is in the slides)!

3.3-slides

Download as PDF

Footnotes

  1. Elinor Ostrom was the first woman to win an Economics Nobel prize. She was famous for her work in studying how good rules can prevent a tragedy of the commons for all sorts of common resources such as fisheries, forests, water, and other environmental resources.↩︎