A negative externality is a cost that is suffered by a third party as a result of an economic transaction. In a transaction, the producer and consumer are the first and second parties, and third parties include any individual, organisation, property owner, or resource that is indirectly affected. Externalities are also referred to as spill over effects, and a negative externality is also referred to as an external cost.
Some externalities, like waste, arise from consumption while other externalities, like carbon emissions from factories, arise from production.
Externalities commonly occur in situations
where property rights over assets or resources have not been allocated,
or are uncertain. For example, no one owns the oceans and they are not
the private property of anyone, so ships may pollute the sea without
fear of being taken to court. The importance of establishing property
rights is central to the ideas of influential Peruvian economist,
Hernando De Soto, who has widely argued that successful market
economies need a widespread allocation of property rights to enable
economies to fully develop.
An external cost, such as the cost of pollution from industrial production, makes the marginal social cost (MSC) curve higher than the private marginal cost (MPC).
The socially efficient output is where MSC = MSB, at Q1, which is a lower
output than the market equilibrium output, at Q.
Net welfare loss can exist in two situations. Firstly, it exists when the marginal cost to society of a particular economic activity, such as manufacturing 200,000 computers, is greater than the marginal benefit to society. Secondly, it can exist when the marginal benefit of a given economic activity, such as producing 50,000m computers, is greater than the marginal cost.
The first situation can occur when the market produces 'too much', and the second when it produces 'too little'.
For example, If
we consider a manufacturer of computers which emits pollutants into the
atmosphere, the free market equilibrium will
occur when marginal private benefit = marginal private costs, at output
Q and price P.
At
Q marginal social costs (at C) are greater than marginal social benefits
(at A) so there is a net loss. For example, if the marginal social
benefit at A is £5m, and the marginal social cost at C is £10m, then the
net welfare loss of this output is £10m - £5m = £5m. In fact, any output
between Q1 and Q creates a net welfare loss, and the area for all the
welfare loss is the area ABC.
Therefore, in terms of welfare, markets over-produce goods
that generate
external costs.
Market-based solutions try to manipulate market forces to reduce the externality, by exploiting the price mechanism. One such market-based solution is to extend property rights so that third parties can negotiate with those individuals or organisations that cause the externality. British economist and Nobel Prize winner, Ronald Coase argued that the establishment of property rights would provide an efficient solution to the problem of externalities. As long as one party can establish a property right, there will be a bargaining process leading to an agreement in which externalities are taken into account.
If property rights cannot be established, such as with the air, sea, or
roads, then the only two options are:
We
learn to live with externalities
Government intervenes on our behalf through taxes or direct controls and
regulations
Taxing polluters, such as carbon taxes, or taxes on plastic bags.
Subsidising households or firms to be non-polluters, such as giving grants for home insulation improvements.
Selling permits to pollute, which may become traded by the polluters.
Forcing polluters to pay compensation to those who suffer, such as making noise polluting airports pay for double-glazing.
Road pricing schemes, such as the Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) system in Singapore, which is a pay-as-you-go, card-based, road-pricing scheme.
Providing more information to consumers and producers, such as requiring that tickets to travel on polluting forms of transport, especially air travel, should contain information on how much CO2 pollution will be created from each journey.
When certain goods are consumed, such as
demerit goods, negative effects can
arise on third parties.
For example, if an individual plays very loud music in their house they are likely to reduce the benefit to their neighbours of owning the house and living in it.