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Public Choice

Public Choice. Chapter 6. Market Failures and Government Intervention. How do governments and state bureaucrats actually behave? Efficiency of providing the public goods Government failures leading to an inefficient level of government expenditure. Efficient Provision of Public Goods.

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Public Choice

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  1. Public Choice Chapter 6

  2. Market Failures and Government Intervention • How do governments and state bureaucrats actually behave? • Efficiency of providing the public goods • Government failures leading to an inefficient level of government expenditure

  3. Efficient Provision of Public Goods • A trade-off between private and public goods is just like a tradeoff between two private goods • The indifference curves for the public goods are also downward-sloping (more of one good must be obtained to compensate for a reduction in the availability of the other good for the consumer to remain indifferent) • Indifference curves are also strictly convex to the origin (as more private goods are consumed, the household is willing to give up fewer and fewer units of the public good to obtain successive additional units of the private good) • The further away from the origin the indifference curve is located, the higher overall utility it represents

  4. Existence Value • An individual may derive satisfaction from the provision of a public good even if he or she himself or herself does not consume the good • Examples include charity, contributions for preserving wild nature • Some people attribute value just to the fact that something exists: the existence value

  5. Compensating Variation • Suppose the household is only consuming the private good: in the space of the private and public goods the price of the public good is zero so that the budget line is a horizontal line • Suppose the government provides a certain amount of public good • What is the most the household is willing to pay for the opportunity to consume that amount of public good? • The reduction in quantity of the previously consumed private good that leaves the household on the same indifference curve is called compensating variation

  6. Compensating Variation Private good A Initial budget line C CV B Public good

  7. Marginal Willingness to Pay Private good Marginal willingness to pay for the public good CV Public good

  8. Adding MWTP Curves for Public Goods • Re-cap: one individual’s consumption of a public good does not reduce the other person’s ability to consume the public good • Therefore, we add MWTP-s for a public good vertically rather than horizontally, to obtain the aggregate MWTP

  9. Aggregate MWTP $ MWTP2 Aggregate MWTP MWTP1 Public good

  10. How Large Should the Provision of the Public Good Be? • Re-cap: one individual’s consumption of a public good does not reduce the other person’s ability to consume the public good • Therefore, we add MWTP-s for a public good vertically rather than horizontally • Suppose the marginal cost curve (MC) of producing an extra unit of a public good is increasing upwards • The optimal supply is obtained when the sum of the marginal willingness to pay over all households is equal to the marginal cost of provision • Since both households can consume the unit simultaneously, we just add up the households’ marginal willingness to pay for the public good in order to obtain total (aggregate) MWTP

  11. Adding MWTP for Public Goods $ Hshld 2 Aggregate MWTP MWTP household 1 Hshld 1 Public good

  12. Adding up MWTP for Public Goods • For a supply less than the equilibrium amount, the sum of the marginal willingness to pay over all households is greater than the marginal cost of producing an extra unit of a public good • For levels above the equilibrium amount households are not willing to give up a sufficient amount of consumption of other goods (or their income) to cover the cost of producing the final unit of the public good, so that reduction in supply adds to social welfare

  13. Provision of Public Goods and Pareto Efficiency • A pure public good is efficiently supplied when the sum of each individual’s marginal willingness to pay is equal to the marginal cost of supplying the good • Pareto efficiency in private markets requires that an individual’s MWTP is equal to the marginal cost (p=MC) • The difference arises because public goods can be consumed simultaneously by many individuals

  14. Public Goods Provision and Pareto Efficiency • Private goods: MRS1=MRS2=p1/p2=MRT • Public goods: MRS1+MRS2=MRT

  15. How can Pareto Efficient Provision of Public Goods can be Attained? • Assume the voter is paying a tax price to cover the provision of public goods (the individual’s share of a dollar of government expenditure) • With uniform taxation of H individuals the uniform tax price is $1/H • The tax paid by the individual is p*z, where z is the amount of the public good • In this case the budget constraint for a particular individual is given by y=qx+pz, where qx is price times quantity of the private good, y is income and pz is price times quantity of the public good

  16. Deriving the Demand Curve for Public Goods • By varying the tax price for the public good provision we can derive the demand curve for a public good • If the public good is normal as opposed to inferior an increase in the voter’s income shifts the demand curve to the northeast • Therefore, individuals with different incomes will vote for different levels of public goods (lower income people will vote for a smaller amount of public goods) • If taxation is proportional, the tax price is an increasing function of income so that in this case we cannot be sure whether higher incomes will lead to an increase of decrease of the demand for a public good

  17. Deriving the Demand Curve for a Public Good A B Budget Line with a Smaller Tax Price Budget Line with a Higher Tax Price

  18. Income and Demand for a Public Good • An increase in income shifts demand curve for a public good rightwards • Various income groups will vote for different levels of public good • Higher income does not necessarily mean higher demand for a public good! • It does under uniform taxation • It does not necessarily under progressive taxation

  19. Lindahl Equilibrium • Assume there are only two individuals in the economy • Let those individuals pay for the public goods according to their respective demand curves • Obtain equality between the sum of their tax prices and the marginal cost of producing the public good • In the Lindahl equilibrium P1+P2=MC, and the two individuals are consuming the same amount of the public good

  20. Lindahl Equilibrium and Pareto Efficiency • Lindahl equilibrium is Pareto efficient in the sense that price (i.e. the sum of individual tax prices) is equal to the marginal cost • However, because individuals realize their tax prices depend on their willingness to pay for the public goods provision may try to cheat by under- or over-stating their true willingness to pay for the public good • This problem may be seen as a special case of the free rider problem illustrated by means of the prisoners’ dilemma • In general, it is necessary to reveal individual preferences in order to arrive at Lindahl equilibrium, but it is not clear how to do that

  21. Revealing Preferences for Optimal Taxation • In general, it is necessary to reveal individual preferences in order to arrive at Lindahl equilibrium, but it is not clear how to do that • In the case of private goods, individuals reveal their preferences in market place • In the case of public goods there is no similar market mechanism so we need to reveal preferences • Possibilities • Ask people about their willingness to pay for public goods • Hypothetical payment experiments (contingent valuation methodology) • Use some voting mechanism

  22. The Majority Voting Rule • Majority voting rule: the alternative (among two alternatives) that receives the majority of votes wins • Does the majority voting rule produce a Pareto-efficient allocation? • Each level of the public good provision results in different levels of utility so we can plot utility schedules against the various levels of public good provision

  23. Classes of Individuals according to their Most Preferred Level of Public Good Provision Utility The Rich Middle Class The Poor Public Good

  24. The Median Voter • The median voter is the one for whom the number of individuals preferring more expenditure is exactly equal to the number of individuals preferring less expenditure • In the example before, the median voter’s most preferred level of public good provision gets adopted according to the majority voting rule • Under uniform taxation, majority voting results in the Pareto efficient level of public good provision since the median voter prefers an expenditure level such that his MWTP is equal to the marginal costs • If taxation is proportional and the median voter’s income is smaller than the average income in the society, his tax price will be small and he will vote for a greater amount of public good compared to the one where price is equal to marginal costs

  25. Proportional Taxation Suppose taxation is proportional to income Let median voter’s income fall short of the average income Median voter’s tax price is relatively low Median voter will vote for too much of a public good Expenditure on public goods will be excessive

  26. Majority Voting and Pareto Efficiency • Majority-voting can, but need not be Pareto efficient • Sometimes majority-voting equilibrium will not exist

  27. Majority Voting Majority-voting equilibrium can be, but is not necessarily, Pareto-efficient Paradox of voting: the order is important Multiple-peaked preferences

  28. Why do Voters Vote? • With millions of voters in the society, each individual’s impact on the voting outcome is negligible • Why do people continue to vote? • Interdependent utilities (e.g. some people may care about the poor or clean environment) • In democratic societies, children are taught that voting is a duty

  29. Bureaucrats and Voters • Bureaucrats seek to maximize the size of their agencies so they choose the level of public good provision that is too high compared to the efficient one • Bureaucrats might choose the level of public good provision for which the society is willing to pay a positive price • This maximum level of public good provision will be given by the intersection of the aggregate demand curve for the public good and the horizontal axis • Such excessive provision of a public good will be incurring social welfare loss

  30. Excessive Provision of Public Goods Public good amount that maximizes the size of the bureaucracy Socially efficient level of public good provision

  31. Avoiding Being Detected Lack of competition among bureaucratic agencies Must be difficult to ascertain costs and benefits of public good provision Another possibility: voted budgets

  32. Voted Budgets • Forcing the voters to choose between too little and too much of the public good, the bureaucrats have a good chance of getting the permission to produce too much of the public good (e.g. police force in a criminal city) • The economic policy may reflect interests of those in power • Size of agricultural sector is way too large in most industrialized powers • In short, government intervention into public goods provision does not necessarily move the economy closer to the Pareto efficient allocation

  33. Reversion Level • Public good provision maximizing utility of the median voter is disadvantageous to the bureaucrat • Design a voting scheme that has two options: • A little public good at the reversion level (utility U1 for the median voter) • A lot of public good (utility U2 a little more than U1)

  34. Reversion Level Voting The voting scheme (scam?) will result in the size of the budget that maximizes the bureaucrats’ utility A utility a little bit higher than the one obtained at the reversion level Median voter prefererence Same utility with reversion level Reversion Level

  35. Political Business Cycle • Nordhaus (1975) • Politicians increase probability of reelection • Voters dislike inflation and unemployment • Let’s manipulate business cycles to make sure the minima of both are at the time of election! • Reinforcing the size of troughs may be then an objective

  36. Market Failures • Sometimes governments can correct for them • Externalities • Monopolies • Often government intervention produces Pareto inefficiency • Voting paradoxes • Public good provision

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