JoVE Logo

Войдите в систему

14.20 : First Welfare Theorem II

Markets don’t always work perfectly. In theory, they should allocate resources efficiently, but real-world problems often get in the way. One major issue is externalities—when a transaction affects people who aren’t directly involved. Negative externalities, like pollution, impose costs on others without compensation. A steel factory dumping waste into a river harms nearby farmers, yet the factory has no reason to stop unless regulations or taxes force it to consider these hidden costs.

Another challenge is asymmetric information. When one party knows more than the other, markets become inefficient. If a landlord hides plumbing problems from a tenant, the tenant might pay more than the apartment is worth. This imbalance can lead to adverse selection, where only lower-quality products remain in the market, or moral hazard, where people take bigger risks because they don’t bear the full consequences. Transparency laws and disclosure rules help correct this.

People also don’t always make rational economic decisions. Standard economic theory assumes they do, but in reality, emotions and biases influence behavior. Panic buying during a health scare can lead to shortages and price spikes, disrupting the market. Policymakers often use nudges and public information campaigns to prevent these inefficiencies.

Some markets are incomplete, meaning they don’t provide ways to trade certain goods or manage risks. Without proper insurance, small businesses may avoid investing, slowing economic growth. Governments step in with subsidies or financial tools to fill these gaps. Without intervention, markets often fail to reach efficiency on their own.

Теги

Welfare TheoremMarket EfficiencyExternalitiesNegative ExternalitiesAsymmetric InformationAdverse SelectionMoral HazardTransparency LawsEconomic DecisionsBiasesPanic BuyingIncomplete MarketsInsurance GapsGovernment InterventionSubsidies

Из главы 14:

article

Now Playing

14.20 : First Welfare Theorem II

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

24 Просмотры

article

14.1 : Анализ частичного равновесия

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

157 Просмотры

article

14.2 : Анализ общего равновесия

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

79 Просмотры

article

14.3 : Функция социального обеспечения

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

70 Просмотры

article

14.4 : Недостаток функции социального обеспечения

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

49 Просмотры

article

14.5 : Эффективность по Парето

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

79 Просмотры

article

14.6 : Коробка Эджворта

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

144 Просмотры

article

14.7 : Эффективность обмена: выгоды от торговли I

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

48 Просмотры

article

14.8 : Эффективность обмена: выгоды от торговли II

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

36 Просмотры

article

14.9 : Цены и распределение товаров

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

42 Просмотры

article

14.10 : Биржевая эффективность: кривая потребительских контрактов

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

52 Просмотры

article

14.11 : Эффективность ввода I

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

50 Просмотры

article

14.12 : Эффективность ввода II

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

30 Просмотры

article

14.13 : Эффективность ввода III

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

69 Просмотры

article

14.14 : Эффективность затрат: кривая производственных контрактов

General Equilibrium Theory and Welfare Economics

52 Просмотры

See More

JoVE Logo

Исследования

Образование

О JoVE

Авторские права © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Все права защищены