3.6.1 Rationale for government intervention

Cards (162)

  • What is government intervention in the economy aimed at correcting?
    Market failure
  • Government intervention may include policies like taxation, subsidies, and regulation
  • What is the primary reason for government intervention in the economy?
    Improve economic efficiency
  • Negative externalities occur when social costs exceed private costs.
  • Match the market failure with its example:
    Externalities ↔️ Factories polluting the environment
    Public Goods ↔️ National defense
    Information Asymmetry ↔️ Used car sales
    Monopoly Power ↔️ Utility companies
  • What are the two types of externalities?
    Negative and positive
  • What is an example of a positive externality?
    Vaccinations
  • Public goods are non-excludable and non-rivalrous.
  • Government intervention may include policies like taxation, subsidies, and regulation
  • What is a primary example of information asymmetry in the market?
    Used car sales
  • Order the following market failures based on their frequency in the economy:
    1️⃣ Externalities
    2️⃣ Public goods
    3️⃣ Information asymmetry
    4️⃣ Monopoly power
  • Monopoly power can lead to higher prices and reduced output.
  • What are the main types of market failures?
    Externalities, public goods, information asymmetry, monopoly power
  • Externalities occur when costs or benefits affect third parties
  • Public goods are excludable and rivalrous.
    False
  • What is information asymmetry in the context of market failures?
    Unequal access to information
  • Monopoly power arises when a single firm dominates the market
  • Match the market failure with its example:
    Externalities ↔️ Pollution
    Public Goods ↔️ National defense
    Information Asymmetry ↔️ Used car sales
    Monopoly Power ↔️ Utility companies
  • What are the two types of externalities?
    Negative and positive
  • Non-excludable and non-rivalrous goods are called public goods
  • Order the types of market failures from most common to least common:
    1️⃣ Externalities
    2️⃣ Public Goods
    3️⃣ Information Asymmetry
    4️⃣ Monopoly Power
  • What are negative externalities?
    Social costs exceed private costs
  • Positive externalities occur when social benefits exceed private benefits
  • What is the free-rider problem associated with public goods?
    Under-provision by the market
  • Moral hazard is caused by protection from losses
  • Why do governments regulate monopolies?
    Prevent market abuse
  • Match the regulatory method with its description:
    Price controls ↔️ Sets maximum prices
    Output quotas ↔️ Limits production quantity
    Competition laws ↔️ Prevents anti-competitive mergers
    Natural monopoly regulation ↔️ Oversees essential services
  • What is the purpose of government intervention in the economy?
    Correct market failure
  • Negative externalities occur when social costs exceed private costs
  • Public goods are non-excludable and non-rivalrous.
  • What is the primary issue with information asymmetry?
    Unequal access to information
  • Public goods are often under-provided by the market due to the free-rider problem
  • What is a negative externality?
    Social costs exceed private costs
  • Public goods are non-excludable and non-rivalrous, often under-provided by the market due to the free-rider problem
  • What are the key characteristics of public goods?
    Non-excludable and non-rivalrous
  • Match the example with the type of good:
    Pollution ↔️ Negative externality
    National defense ↔️ Public good
    Vaccinations ↔️ Positive externality
  • Externalities lead to efficient resource allocation in the market.
    False
  • What is information asymmetry?
    Unequal access to information
  • Moral hazard arises when one party takes on more risk because they are protected from losses
  • Moral hazard can lead to increased risk-taking and potential fraud.