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Taxes for factoring in negative externalities | Microeconomics | Khan Academy

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    In the last video, we first
    thought about externalities,
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    the negative externalities
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    of having plastic bags around.
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    It causes litter, it might damage animals
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    and the environment in some way.
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    We're assuming ... And
    we assumed in that video
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    that we were able to calculate the actual
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    external cost of a plastic bag.
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    This two cents a bag is the impact on
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    litter in the environment.
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    Then we were able to figure out
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    that if we factor this in,
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    instead of just having the regular
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    marginal cost cover the suppliers,
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    if we added that marginal cost curve
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    to the external cost,
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    we would get a supplier plus
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    external costs, marginal cost curve,
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    and then we'd get what is actually
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    the optimal price and
    quantity of plastic bags
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    so that we actually do not eat into
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    our surplus by creating all of this
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    negative surplus where the total cost
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    of the bags are higher than
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    the total benefit.
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    One thing that we did not touch on
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    in that video, is how
    does this actually happen?
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    If we just let things be,
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    and we just had the supplier's
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    marginal cost curve
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    and we have the consumer's demand curve,
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    in this case, the consumers
    were the supermarkets,
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    then the equilibrium price that'll be
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    reached will be right over here
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    because although we're theoretically
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    saying that there's this cost over here,
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    the cost won't be factored in
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    into the markets.
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    So if you are the benevolent emperor
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    in this society, what do you do?
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    What do you do to get the quantity
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    closer to this point right over here
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    than what the equilibrium quantity
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    will be when you don't factor in
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    the external cost?
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    There's a bunch of options here.
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    You could just ban plastic bags ...
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    ban plastic bags,
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    you could put a quota on plastic bags,
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    you could put a quota, so saying that
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    more than a certain amount of bags
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    could not be produced, or
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    you could tax plastic bags,
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    or you could tax plastic bags.
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    Let's think about which of these will
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    result in the most surplus,
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    the most benefit to society in aggregate.
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    One core assumption we're going to make
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    is that this is an accurate assessment
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    of the external cost per bag.
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    If you were to just ban plastic bags
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    as this benevolent emperor,
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    maybe seemingly or hopefully
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    benevolent emperor of
    this society right here,
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    if you just banned plastic bags,
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    what would happen?
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    Well, then this market just won't exist.
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    All of this surplus
    that could have existed,
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    won't exist anymore,
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    so you would actually
    be destroying surplus.
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    You could say, "No,
    no, no ... plastic bags
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    are horrible. They should
    just be outright banned.
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    There's no amount of benefit for which
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    plastic bags are worth using,"
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    but in that case, you're actually arguing
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    this point right over here.
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    You'd be arguing that, "No, it's not
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    2 cents a bag, it's 10 cents a bag,"
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    of negative externality,
    and because of that,
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    you would have this
    curve shift up even more
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    and then there's no
    positive quantity there
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    and maybe a ban would be all right.
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    But if the 2 cents is the externality,
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    the negative externality,
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    and if you were to ban plastic bags,
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    then you would actually be removing,
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    you would be removing
    this surplus from society.
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    That doesn't seem like a good option.
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    Now what about a quota?
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    You kind of look at the
    study right over here
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    and you say, "Look, the optimal amount
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    of plastic bags is 1.9
    million bags per week,
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    so I will just say that that's most
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    that the market can produce."
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    But when you say that, that's assuming
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    that you really do understand what this
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    demand curve looks like.
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    I just drew a straight line here
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    just out of simplicity, and
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    assuming that you really do understand
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    what this marginal cost curve looks like.
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    Throughout this playlist,
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    we've been assuming that we kind of do
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    understand those things, but
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    in the real world, it's actually very hard
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    to know exactly what the marginal cost
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    of the curve looks like,
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    and it's also hard to know exactly
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    what the marginal benefit curve,
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    or the demand curve looks like,
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    especially because
    they're always changing.
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    There's always more competitors,
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    less competitors, more
    substitute products,
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    more R&D, things are
    getting more efficient,
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    less efficient; and so it's very hard
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    to know what the true equilibrium
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    quantity should be.
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    A quota is difficult.
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    We don't have quite the right information.
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    A tax is interesting.
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    A tax says, "Look, regardless of
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    what the marginal cost curve really is,
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    we're just going to
    shift it up by 2 cents."
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    We saw that when we
    first talked about taxes.
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    When we first talked about
    taxes, we talked about
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    they're introducing a dead weight loss
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    because you're not
    producing as much quantity
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    as you would have otherwise, or
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    as much quantity isn't being consumed.
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    But here, a tax could actually prevent
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    a dead weight loss because if you have
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    a 2 cent tax, essentially adding the cost
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    of the negative externality
    in the form of a tax
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    on top of the supplier's
    cost right over here,
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    you are going to cause
    the equilibrium quantity
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    to be the quantity where you're not
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    generating all of this negative surplus,
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    and it's just a positive side effect,
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    and once again, this is all assuming
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    that this is the right number,
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    but it would be a positive side effect
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    that you would also generate some revenue
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    for the government.
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    What's good about the
    tax in this circumstance
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    right over here, you're
    not assuming anything
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    about what the marginal
    cost curve looks like
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    or what the demand curve looks like.
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    As long as you're assuming that this
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    is the right number,
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    the tax will always shift whatever
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    the marginal cost curve is,
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    it'll always shift it to the right point
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    to intersect wherever the demand curve is
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    at this equilibrium point,
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    that gives us an equilibrium price
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    and an equilibrium quantity.
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    So if this is the right number and
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    you put a 2 cent tax per bag,
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    a 2 cent tax per bag,
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    then this is probably
    going to be the best option
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    in terms of optimizing the total surplus.
Title:
Taxes for factoring in negative externalities | Microeconomics | Khan Academy
Description:

How to factor in negative externalities through taxation

Watch the next lesson: https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/microeconomics/consumer-producer-surplus/externalities-topic/v/positive-externalities?utm_source=YT&utm_medium=Desc&utm_campaign=microeconomics

Missed the previous lesson? https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/microeconomics/consumer-producer-surplus/externalities-topic/v/negative-externalities?utm_source=YT&utm_medium=Desc&utm_campaign=microeconomics

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
05:45

English subtitles

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