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  • Tony, a fisherman, has been living in a house by the lake since he was young.

  • Over the years, the lake is becoming more popular and one day a large hotel gets built.

  • The hotel obscures all the sunlight and the guests leave their trash on the beach . To

  • Tony these are negative externalities.

  • Although, the good smell of the freshly roasted coffee from the coffee shop that opened right

  • next to the hotel is a positive externality though

  • Things start getting complicated when a paper factory begins polluting the river that flows

  • down the mountain into the lake where Tony and other fishermen earn a living.

  • Can you think of the effects the factory may have on the community?

  • You may pause the video and share your thoughts before we continue!

  • The paper factory is using the clean water from the mountain river.

  • Through the production process, the water gets dirty and afterwards the polluted water

  • is put back into the river.

  • This water then kills a lot of fish downstream - a cost to society that no one covers.

  • Tony and the fishermen start to fear for their existence.

  • And then things get worse

  • The paper mill, which doesn't factor the cost of the dead fish into their cost of production,

  • is therefore charging too little when selling the paper.

  • As a consequence, the paper is so cheap that the coffee shop starts using disposable cups

  • where they were using porcelain before.

  • This again leads to more production of paper, more polluted water, more fish dying and more

  • trash on the beach.

  • Tony is getting anxious.

  • To change the situation, the fishermen decide to stage public protests until the local government

  • announces a new law.

  • The factory is now forced to fully internalize the costs of their waste management through

  • the installation of filters.

  • Soon after, the water is clean again and Tony and the other fishermen can go back to selling

  • the same amount of fish they used to.

  • And since the price of the paper goes up to cover the costs of the filtration systems,

  • the coffee shops begin serving drinks in real cups again.

  • We can illustrate what is happening on a supply and demand chart with price and quantity demanded

  • for the paper:

  • In an unregulated market, the factory supplies its products based on so-called private costs,

  • such as construction, salaries and the raw materials.

  • Demand meets supply accordingly.

  • If the paper factory would have added the costs of the damages that it causes to society,

  • the supply curve would have shifted to the left, leading to an equilibrium reflecting

  • the true costs, including the social costs.

  • Now the price of paper is higher and the quantity of paper demanded is lower.

  • Pollution and other negative externalities are especially prevalent where people lack

  • the same moral values and where things tend to be free of charge.

  • Such is the case with water or air.

  • Fishing at high seas is such a case.

  • Since no one can fully control the oceans and the high sea doesn't really belong to

  • anyone, everyone takes as much as they can - a phenomenon called the tragedy of the commons.

  • To combat negative externalities and avoid such a tragedy, we can do four things: create

  • public awareness, assign property rights appropriately, force the internalization of negative externalities

  • or turn to regulation and fines.

  • Let's summarize:

  • Externalities are consequences of an activity experienced by a third party.

  • Negative externalities that are not internalized, distort supply and demand at the expense of

  • third parties.

  • To avoid market distortion and a tragedy of the commons, we can combat negative externalities.

  • Ready to help us think how to do that in order to curb CO2 emissions?

  • People that drive cars that run on petrol cause emissions, including CO2 which is responsible

  • for air pollution and climate change.

  • In order to reduce emissions, some governments give their citizens a financial incentive

  • if they buy an electric car.

  • Imagine you are the Minister of Transportation in your country.

  • Could you think of another way to increase the number of electric cars on the streets

  • by applying the concept of externalities?

  • Please write down your ideas in the comments below!

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Tony, a fisherman, has been living in a house by the lake since he was young.

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