Market Failure: Group 9 Bagatsing, Joshua Peñalosa, Gianna Romulo, Drea Tangtatco, Eunice
Market Failure: Group 9 Bagatsing, Joshua Peñalosa, Gianna Romulo, Drea Tangtatco, Eunice
Market Failure: Group 9 Bagatsing, Joshua Peñalosa, Gianna Romulo, Drea Tangtatco, Eunice
GROUP 9
BAGATSING, JOSHUA
PEÑALOSA, GIANNA
ROMULO, DREA
TANGTATCO, EUNICE
MARKET FAILURE
WHAT IS MARKET FAILURE?
Occurs when resources
are located inefficiently
It is when markets fail to
reach optimal outcome
Results in waste or lost
value
System is not Pareto
efficient.
MARKET FAILURE
Pareto Efficiency?
An improvement in one area which would cause
corresponding harm somewhere else.
If the market is Pareto efficient, it means that everything is
in balance.
Operating at optimum level
MARKET FAILURE
SOURCES OF MARKET FAILURE
MARKET FAILURE
IMPERFECT MARKET
STRUCTURE
An imperfect market is a situation where
individual firms have some measure of control
or discretion over the price of the commodity in
an industry
This imperfect competition does not necessarily
mean that a firm can arbitrarily put any price on
its commodity
Imperfect Markets exercise Market Power
o Market Power – the ability to raise price without
losing all of the quantity demanded for their product
MARKET FAILURE
Imperfect Competition
It is a market situation where single/individual firms
have a measure of control over the price of the
commodity and competition in an industry.
o A firm that can affect the market price of its output can be
classified as an imperfect competitor.
An imperfect competitor does not have absolute power over
price and may or may not have product differentiation/variation
The industries that rise the inefficient allocation of
resources
It normally arises when an industry's output is
supplied only by one, or a relatively small number of
firms.
MARKET FAILURE
Monopoly
An industry composed of only one firm that
produces a product for which there are no close
substitutes and in which significant barriers exist
to prevent new firms from entering the industry
o Market situation where a single seller exists and has
complete control over an industry
Control over vital resources
Product techniques and processes
Licenses
Copyrights
Limit Pricing
Size of Market
MARKET FAILURE
Monopolistically Competitive Industries
(Monopolistic Competition)
An industry made up of a large number of firms
that acquire price-setting power by
differentiating their products or by establishing a
brand name
o It occurs when there are many sellers producing
differentiated products
o Firms have slight control over the price of the commodity
they advertise
MARKET FAILURE
Others
Monopsony - When there is only one buyer of
a good
Oligopsony - When there are few buyers of a
good
Information Asymmetry - When one competitor
has the advantage of more or better
information
MARKET FAILURE
The Truth behind Imperfect Markets
Monopoly
o Being a monopolist does not ensure the firm instant
profit
o It is not true that the firm can impose any price it
wants because maximum price is dictated by
market demand
o A firm that attempts to monopolize the industry or
that conspires with other firms to reduce
competition, risks serious penalties
Ex. Antitrust Case by the Justice Department against
Microsoft in the 1990’s
Microsoft was accused of trying to monopolize the
browser market and other anti competitive practices
MARKET FAILURE
PUBLIC GOODS
Public Goods or Social Goods
- goods and services that bestow common
benefits on members of society
Private Goods
- goods and services produced by firms for
sale to individual households
MARKET FAILURE
PUBLIC GOODS
• Produced using land, labor, and
capital just like any other good
MARKET FAILURE
What happens if public goods
were left to private profit-
seeking producers?
• Private provision of public goods
fails
• A completely laissez-faire market
system will not produce
everything that all members of a
society might want
MARKET FAILURE
What should they do?
• Citizens must group together to
ensure that desired public
goods are produced
- this can be accomplished
through government spending
financed by taxes
MARKET FAILURE
EXTERNALITIES
It is a cost or benefit bestowed on an individual or
a group that is outside the transaction.
Something that affects a third party
They are only a problem if decision makers do not
take them into account
NOT ALL EXTERNALITIES ARE NEGATIVE.
There are also positive externalities
MARKET FAILURE
Negative Externalities
A “SOCIAL COST”.
Most of the time related to environmental
consequences of production and use
Occurs when an individual or firm making a decision
does not have to pay the full cost of the decision
cost to society > cost consumer is paying for it
Examples of which are air or water pollution, global
warming, noise and congestion.
MARKET FAILURE
MARKET FAILURE
© FundamentalFinance.com
How can this be solved?
Tax the producer
Adds to the producer’s marginal cost
MARKET FAILURE
Positive Externalities
External benefit
Benefit of the firm or individual < benefit of
society.
Less is produced and consumed than the socially
optimal level
Examples:
Knowledge spillover of ideas
Keeping the backyard well maintained
Collection of honey from bees
Immunization/Vaccination
MARKET FAILURE
MARKET FAILURE
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How can this be solved?
Give a subsidy to consumers.
By giving consumers a subsidy, it will increase the
benefit that they will receive when they consume a good.
MARKET FAILURE
The government can INTERVENE to
address this issue BUT government
intervention can also CONTRIBUTE in
market failure, therefore making the problem
worse.
MARKET FAILURE
IMPERFECT INFORMATION
Lack of knowledge about the product
Leads to an inefficient market
Difficult to judge benefits and costs of purchase of
products and services
Example are life insurances, services that needs
expertise
Examples of information failure
Uncertainty about costs and benefits
Complex information
Inaccurate or misleading information
MARKET FAILURE
IMPERFECT INFORMATION
Can be corrected by:
Truth-in advertising regulations
Government provides information to the citizens
MARKET FAILURE
MARKET MECHANISM
In reality, markets aren’t perfect
Some ask help from government to correct market
failure
Government might not be able to help, instead it could make
things worse
Outcome of free market is ultimately unfair
MARKET FAILURE
Evaluating the Market Mechanism
A Perfectly Competitive model reflects the way
markets really operate because of its clear
advantages
o Markets such that no participants are large enough to have
the market power to set the price of a homogeneous product
It includes non-competitive markets, imperfect
markets, public goods and externalities
Firms can make profits only when a demand for their
products exist
The profit motive should provide competitive firms
with incentives
o Minimize cost
o Produce their product using the most efficient technologies
MARKET FAILURE
References
The Principles of Economics: Chapter 12
- Market Failure
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperfect_competition
www.investorwords.com/2380/imperfect_market.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oligopoly
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopolistic_competition
MARKET FAILURE
References
www.investopedia.com/terms/i/imperfectmarket.asp
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monopoly
www.wisegeek.com/what-is-imperfect-competition.htm
www.tutor2u.net/economics/content/topics/competition/comp
etition.htm
www.answers.com/topic/imperfect-competition
www.investopedia.com/terms/p/perfectcompetition.asp
economics.fundamentalfinance.com/
MARKET FAILURE