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Economic Scare Stories
• Market Failure
• Government Failure
Previous four lectures: overview of role of government in the economy
• Normative analysis
• The economic rationales (tests): Competitive markets work amazingly well – But sometimes there is market failure:
externalities, public goods, and monopoly power.• Could you show this with deadweight loss charts and
how about telling a story too?
– And the income distribution may be too unequal with need for a social safety net
Sometimes the market results in too little production: monopoly
power, positive externalities15_05A
DOLLARS
Marginal benefit (demand)
Marginal cost (supply)
QUANTITY
EfficientInefficient
(a)
Sometimes the market results in too much production: negative
externalities15_05B
DOLLARS
Marginal benefit (demand)
Marginal cost (supply)
QUANTITY
Efficient Inefficient
(b)
Now for the story. Let me tell you about William Swain
• He was a young man who traveled from New York to California in 1849– See map for the route
• His goal: Find goldgold and go back home• Thousands just like him: the Forty-Niners
– Much like an army– No “supply corps” but news, food, tools,
entertainment was supplied
• The invisible hand at work
The story goes on. Let me tell you about hydraulic mining
• high pressure water from the Sierra mountains
• break down the canyon walls to get more gold– caused huge damage to landscape – impeded navigation downstream
• an externality thwarting the invisible hand
Use of Economic Models
• Models of firms and consumers form the basis of the normative analysis
• Now it is time to consider models of government– positive analysis (asks what governments actually do
rather than what they should do)
• Why bother with models of government?– Normative recommendations not followed– government failure is common too– it’s fun!
Public Choice Models
• Basic assumption: Politicians and government workers are motivated by personal gain, just like anyone else
• Politicians want to get elected and re-elected– Even Abraham Lincoln?
• Government workers want to increase their power or prestige
Application to Voting
• The easiest case: single issue with unanimity– Politicians will choose the unanimous view– If they don’t, they will not get elected
• Next easiest case: Single issue with differences of opinion– Median voter theorem applies
Voting paradoxes• Condorcet’s voting paradox
• More than one issue
• Easiest illustration: three voters, three issues– look at example in table
• endless cycles– Softer versus same: Softer wins
– Same versus louder: Same wins
– Softer versus louder: Louder wins
• depends on which vote was taken last
Condorcet’s Voting Paradox
Caleb Joy Bismark
First Softer Same Louder
Second Same Louder Softer
Third Louder Softer Same
Arrow Impossibility Theorem
• Named after Kenneth Arrow of Stanford
• No voting scheme for 3 or more alternatives can satisfy all these reasonable properties– transitivity (if A beats B and B beats C, then A
beats C)
– unanimity (A beats B if everyone prefers A to B)
– independence of irrelevant alternatives
– Non-dictatorship
Another Application: Special Interests
• Exert heavy political pressure in favor of some spending or tax program– Benefits concentrated on a few, costs diffuse
– sugar quota example: • costs each consumer about $5 per year• each grower gets over $100,000 per year
• Rent seeking (wasteful lobbying): skilled lobbyists could do something more useful– Anne Krueger of Stanford has shown that this is a serious
problem for developing economies
Yet another example: Regulators Captured by Industry
• Railroads originally regulated as a natural monopoly
• Competition from trucks and airplanes eliminated the natural monopoly
• But as competition put pressure on prices, regulation continued and indeed expanded to trucking
• Eventually the regulation ended
• Could the same thing happen to cable TV?
Application of public choice models to Russian economic
crisis• Privatization of industry without antitrust
enforcement created monopolies
• Monopolies now lobby for continuation of lax antitrust policy
• Perhaps greater awareness of political problems would have led economic advisors to focus on competition before privatization
Time Inconsistency
• Incentive for government to change policy
• example of a dam on a flood plain– promise not to build– people move to flood plane anyway– government ends up building the dam– everyone could (and probably did) expect as
much;– example of next midterm exam
International Trade Policy: A Preview
• Trade policy (tariffs, quotas, etc) is an area with many examples of government failure
• Why is international trade policy so prone to policy mistakes?– Sovereign governments can and do restrict trade
with other countries– Compare with commerce clause of the U.S.
constitution prohibiting trade restrictions between states in the United States
Less of a legal constraint on bad trade policy than on policy within
the confines of the U.S.
• Hence, economists (Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Anne Krueger) have made strong efforts to demonstrate – the harms of government intervention in trade – the gains from trade between countries
• natural extensions of microeconomic theory• take it up in the next lecture
– Chapter 18 of textbook