Causes of market failure: missing markets

Efficiency and Market Failure

Missing Markets: Why Some Goods Aren't Traded

In a perfect world, every good would have a market where buyers and sellers meet.

But sometimes a market simply doesn’t exist – we call this a missing market.

When a market is missing, the economy can’t allocate resources efficiently, leading to a market failure.

Missing markets usually arise because the good has a special property that makes it hard or impossible for a private market to work.

Typical examples are:

  • Public goods – goods that are non‑excludable and non‑rival, like street lights 🌃.
  • Externalities – when the cost or benefit of a good spills over to others, like pollution from a factory 🚗.
  • Information asymmetry – when buyers or sellers lack the same information, such as used cars “the lemon problem” 🚙.

Public Goods – The Classic Missing Market

A public good has two key features:

  1. Non‑excludability: Once the good is produced, no one can be prevented from using it. Think of a national flag 🏳️.
  2. Non‑rivalry: One person’s use does not reduce the amount available to others. Everyone can enjoy the flag at the same time.

Because of these features, a private firm has no incentive to supply the good – it can’t charge people for it. The result is a missing market.

Good TypeKey FeaturesMarket Status
Private GoodExcludable & RivalMarket Exists
Public GoodNon‑excludable & Non‑rivalMissing Market
Club GoodExcludable & Non‑rivalMarket Exists (but may need regulation)

Externalities – When the Market Misses the Side Effect

An externality occurs when a transaction affects a third party who is not part of the market.

If the effect is negative, the market tends to produce too much of the good; if positive, too little.

Example: A factory emits smoke that harms nearby residents. The factory doesn’t pay for the damage, so the market price of its product is too low. This is a missing market for the cost of pollution.

Mathematically, we can write the social cost as:

\$\$

C{\text{social}} = C{\text{private}} + C_{\text{external}}

\$\$

If \$C_{\text{external}} > 0\$, the market fails to internalise the cost.

Information Asymmetry – When One Side Knows More

When buyers or sellers have unequal information, the market can break down.

A classic example is the used‑car market: sellers know the true condition of the car, buyers don’t. This can lead to a “lemons problem” 🚙.

Because buyers fear buying a bad product, they are willing to pay less, causing good sellers to exit the market. The result is a missing market for high‑quality used cars.

How the State Can Step In

Governments can create or support markets that are missing by:

  • Providing public goods directly (e.g., national defence 🛡️).
  • Imposing taxes or subsidies to internalise externalities (e.g., carbon tax 🌍).
  • Regulating information disclosure (e.g., food labelling laws 🍎).

When the state intervenes correctly, it can restore efficiency and reduce the gap between private and social welfare.

Key Takeaway

A missing market is a situation where a good or service cannot be efficiently traded because the market structure itself is unsuitable.

Understanding why markets fail helps us design better policies and create a fairer economy for everyone. 🚀