externalities

Economics

(noun)

Impacts, positive or negative, on any party not involved in a given economic transaction or act.

Related Terms

  • subsidy
Management

(noun)

Something that indirectly affects something else. In economics, a cost or benefit that is not captured in the price mechanism.

Related Terms

  • shared value model
  • triple bottom line

Examples of externalities in the following topics:

  • Introducing Externalities

    • An example of an externality is pollution.
    • The third parties who experience external costs from a negative externality do so without consent, while the individuals who receive external benefits do not pay a cost.
    • The existence of externalities can cause ethical and political problems within society.
    • Air pollution caused by motor vehicles is an example of a negative externality.
    • Give examples of externalities that exist in different parts of socity
  • Externalities

    • The cost of an externality is a negative externality , or external cost, while the benefit of an externality is a positive externality, or external benefit.
    • Those who suffer from external costs do so involuntarily, while those who enjoy external benefits do so at no cost.
    • A voluntary exchange may reduce total economic benefit if external costs exist.
    • If there exist external costs such as pollution, the good will be overproduced by a competitive market, as the producer does not take into account the external costs when producing the good.
    • Positive externalities are often associated with the free rider problem.
  • Positive Externalities

    • Positive externalities are benefits caused by activities that affect an otherwise uninvolved party who did not choose to incur that benefit.
    • In the case of positive externalities, a transaction has positive side effects for non-related parties.
    • The homeowner's neighbors benefit from a positive externality.
    • Since parties that create the externality aren't compensated, they do not have any incentive to create more.
    • Use an example to discuss the concept of a positive externality
  • Tax

    • Corrective taxes incentivize economic actors to reduce the production of goods or services generating negative externalities.
    • Taxes are a market-based policy option available to the government to address externalities.
    • The tax is set equal to the value of the negative externality and provides incentives for allocation of resources closer to the social optimum.
    • In the case of negative externalities, the social cost of an activity is greater than the private cost of the activity.
    • The level of the corrective tax is intended to counterbalance the externality.
  • Externality Impacts on Efficiency

    • An example of a negative externality is pollution.
    • An example of a positive externality would be an individual who lives by a bee farm.
    • Positive and negative externalities both impact economic efficiency.
    • Positive externalities are beneficial to the third party at no cost to them.
    • It also shows the economic costs that are associated with externalities.
  • Externalities and Impacts on Resource Allocation

    • In the long run, externalities directly impact resource allocation.
    • A negative externality, also called the external cost, imposes a negative effect on a third party to an economic transaction.
    • Positive externalities, also referred to as external benefits, impose a positive effect on a third party.
    • Air pollution from vehicles is an example of a negative externality.
    • Examine externalities and how they the impact resource allocation of natural resources.
  • Regulation

    • The government can respond to externalities through command-and-control policies or market-based policies.
    • The government can respond to externalities in two ways.
    • Such measures make certain behaviors either required or forbidden with the goal of addressing the externality .
    • On the other hand, if the government allows too much to be dumped in the river, they have failed to mitigate the negative externality.
    • If the government is unsure of how to effectively regulate the market, it should seek other methods of mitigating the externality.
  • The Coase Theorem

    • The Coase theorem states that private parties can find efficient solutions to externalities without government intervention.
    • This is an externality because the Smith family does not pay the Jones family for the utility received from gathering fallen pears.
    • In response, the Jones family can put up a net that will prevent pears from falling on the Smith's side of the property line, eliminating the externality.
    • This graph exemplifies how Coase's Theorem functions in a practical manner, underlining the effects of an externality in an economic model.
    • According to the Coase theorem, two private parties will be able to bargain with each other and find an efficient solution to an externality problem.
  • Negative Externalities

    • Negative externalities are costs caused by an activity that affect an otherwise uninvolved party who did not choose to incur that cost.
    • The private marginal costs are lower than societal marginal costs, which also capture the true costs of the negative externalities.
    • In these cases, government intervention is necessary to help "price" negative externalities.
    • First, these regulations recover funds to help fix the damage caused by negative externalities.
    • The ideal equilibrium quantity that reflects negative externalities is Qs, but firms may produce at Qp.
  • Internal vs. External Forces

    • Net external forces (that are nonzero) change the total momentum of the system, while internal forces do not.
    • External forces: forces caused by external agent outside of the system.
    • All the rest of the universe becomes external.
    • Since all the external forces cancel out with each other, there are no net external forces.
    • Contrast the effects of external and internal forces on linear momentum and collisions
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