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Causes of Government Failure

Government failure is the unintended worsening allocation of resources as a consequence of a policy the government has implemented to correct a market failure. It produces a net welfare loss.

Misallocation of resources

Misallocation of resources

  • Government failure is the result of a policy trying to correct a market failure that has led to a misallocation of resources.
  • This means there is a welfare loss to society.
    • E.g the council might charge people for some forms of waste disposal.
    • This may increase fly-tipping, which is a worsening of the initial pollution externality.
Inadequate or imperfect information

Inadequate or imperfect information

  • In a world of perfect information, governments should be able to make the right decisions to improve allocation.
  • Asymmetric information limits the governments ability to critically assess market failures and possible solutions.
  • So the right decision isn't always made and government failure can arise.
Administrative costs

Administrative costs

  • Resources are needed to implement government intervention.
  • If the cost is too high, the intervention may not be worthwhile.
  • Daniel Kahneman's inside view explains why governments may frequently underestimate the cost of their projects. The Scottish parliament in Holyrood was forecast to cost £10-40M but cost £414M.
Bureaucracy

Bureaucracy

  • The private sector has the incentive to maximise profits, but individuals working for governments rarely get the benefits.
  • Governments are also very large and may suffer from material diseconomies of scale.

Consequences of Government Failure

Government failure can lead to the following issues:

Conflicting Policy Objectives

Conflicting Policy Objectives

  • In trying to satisfy one objective, others can be compromised.
    • E.g macroeconomic policy objectives often clash with environmental policy.
    • By causing firms to cut down on emissions, you may be limiting their potential growth, which is bad for the economy.
  • Politicians may be influenced by what's politically acceptable or unacceptable.
    • E.g governments won't ban car use to try to cut down on greenhouse gas emissions because people rely on cars for convenience.
Market distortions

Market distortions

  • Market distortions can affect the way the price mechanism works. These can be caused by government intervention. For example:
    • Income taxes give people less incentive to work hard, which reduces efficiency.
    • Subsidies may allow firms to make profit without being efficient. This is distortionary.
    • Minimum and maximum price controls can distort price signals (e.g overproduction because producers can guarantee a minimum price).
Jump to other topics
1

Introduction to Markets

2

Market Failure

3

The UK Macroeconomy

4

The UK Economy - Policies

5

Business Behaviour

6

Market Structures

7

A Global Perspective

8

Finance & Inequality

9

Examples of Global Policy

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