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Lecture notes 4.3.1 Market Failure In Society $9.79
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Lecture notes 4.3.1 Market Failure In Society

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These notes helped me get an A* in A Level Economics, covering all aspects of the specification, plus hints of real world context.

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  • June 15, 2023
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  • 2022/2023
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4.3.1 Market Failure in Society



The consequences of the underpraising and under consumption of merit and other goods and services

 Occurs when the free market fails to allocate resources efficiently
 Economic and social welfare is not maximised

Overconsumption of demerit goods

 Overprovision of demerit goods and under provision of merit goods
 Education would be underprovided in a free market as the long term befits are not accounted
for in society
 Not all products that create externalities are merit or demerit goods

Factor immobility (occupational & geographical)

 The geographical immobility of labour
 Obstacles that prevent labour from moving between different areas
 Hard to find labour due to social & family ties
 The occupational immobility refers to obstacles preventing labour changing their use
 Labour might find it difficult to change occupation
 Due to the lack of training and skills
 The flexibility of the labour market is how willing and able labour can change to market
conditions
 Important for labour to adjust to market demand

Imperfect and asymmetric information

 The under provision of public goods
 Public goods are non-excludable a non-rival
 They are underprovided in a free market due to the free rider problem
 Public goods that benefit society are missing in free markets
o Streetlights
 Public goods are non-excludable so by consuming goods someone else is being prevented from
consuming goods
 They are also non rival, so the benefit others get does not have a cost to others.
 Non excludable nature of public goods increases the free rider problem
 People do not pay for the good however still receive benefits from it the same as people who
pay for it
 This is why public goods are underprovided by private sector
 They do not make any profit of providing
 They are underprovided as it is difficult to measure the value
 Consumers undervalue the benefit so want to pay less
 Producers over value the benefit so want to charge more

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