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The production of goods is essential for economic growth and societal development, but it often results in pollution as an unintended consequence. Completely eliminating pollution, while seemingly ideal, is impractical. This would mean stopping all production of vital goods and services. The real challenge is properly balancing the benefits of goods production against the resulting environmental damage.

The Concept of Efficient Pollution

The marginal social cost of pollution is the sum of private and external marginal costs. The socially efficient quantity of output is achieved when the marginal social cost of pollution, which is the additional social harm caused by one more unit of output, equals the marginal benefit of production, which is the social value gained by producing one more unit of goods.

  1. Marginal Social Cost: As production expands, both private production costs and external costs—such as environmental degradation and public health impacts—increase. External costs include water contamination and air pollution, which cause respiratory illnesses and harm to ecosystems.
  2. Marginal Social Benefit: Producing goods like bicycles, cars, or paper supports economic activity and enhances quality of life. These benefits include healthier transportation options and essential services for education and business.

Striking the Balance

The efficient level of pollution is where society can enjoy the benefits of production while accounting for the negative impacts on health and the environment. Governments often regulate industries through policies like pollution taxes or emission limits. These measures encourage companies to reduce emissions while continuing to produce goods that benefit society.

Well-designed environmental policies can help achieve this balance, protecting public health while promoting sustainable economic development.

From Chapter 14:

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14.6 : The Efficient Level of Pollution

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14.1 : Externalities

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14.2 : Private Cost and Benefit

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14.3 : Social Cost and Benefit

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14.4 : Negative Externalities

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14.5 : Positive Externalities

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14.7 : Price Mechanism: Taxes

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14.8 : Price Mechanism: Subsidies

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14.9 : Quantity Mechanism: Quota

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14.10 : Price vs. Quantity-Based Interventions

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14.11 : Tradable Permits Market

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14.12 : The Efficient Amount of Recycling I

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14.13 : The Efficient Amount of Recycling II

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14.14 : Coase Theorem

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14.15 : Private Goods and Common Resources

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