When the free market fails to allocate resources efficiently, we say there is a market failure 🚫. Common causes:
Governments use several tools to correct market failure. Think of them as different “fix‑it” kits:
Example: A carbon tax forces factories to pay for the pollution they create, encouraging cleaner technology.
Even well‑intended policies can backfire. Here are the main risks:
Mathematically: \$DWL = \frac{1}{2}(P{\text{tax}} - P{\text{market}})(Q{\text{tax}} - Q{\text{market}})\$.
Analogy: Imagine a teacher who tries to balance a classroom by giving everyone the same number of pencils. Some students need more, some less – the effort may actually reduce learning.
When answering questions about government failure:
💡 Tip: Practice drawing supply & demand curves with a tax and annotate the deadweight loss triangle.
| Scenario | Price to Consumers | Price to Producers | Quantity Sold |
|---|---|---|---|
| Market equilibrium (no tax) | \$P^*\,\$ | \$P^*\,\$ | \$Q^*\,\$ |
| After tax \$t\$ on producers | \$P^* + t\$ | \$P^*\$ | \$Q_{\text{tax}} < Q^*\$ |
Notice the higher consumer price, unchanged producer price, and reduced quantity – the classic tax distortion.