Short Paper # 2 – Examining a Market Failure
Short paper # 2 is due in Week # 10 (Sunday at 9 pm, with a
grace period until 11:59 pm). Papers submitted after 9 pm and up to
and including 11:59 pm on the due date are late but NOT penalized.
Any paper submitted after the grace period is late and penalized at
the rate of one letter grade per day late (or any portion thereof).
Blackboard is the official time keeper. After 3 days, any paper not
submitted is graded as zero. The paper must use at least three
disciplinary sources but not necessarily peer-reviewed sources.
Students may use their textbook as a source, but it will NOT count
as one of the three required sources. Short paper # 2 must include
graphs, a works cited page, have proper APA format throughout the
paper, and must be the equivalent of 4 pages of APA properly
formatted writing. The paper will automatically be evaluated for
originality by Blackboard SafeAssign. Again, you might find it
helpful to review the Prof Battista’s handout “Writing in Economics
using APA and Visual Aids: Some Helpful Hints.”
Students may find the textbook helpful in applying concepts
from their knowledge of chapter 12 (Positive Externalities,
Cost/Benefit Analysis of Environmental Regulation) and Chapter 13
(Negative Externalities, Public Goods, Free Rider Problem)
Short paper # 2 is worth 100 points and assesses Pathways
SLO’s 1-4 and 6, and Gateway LO’s A-C and F.
Try as we may, whether economies have markets that are laissez
faire, loosely or tightly regulated, or whether the government is
the major decision maker, markets do fail. That is, they fail to
register the appropriate/proper/efficient prices and quantities in
the marketplace. Costs and/or benefits may, in some markets, spill
over onto people outside of the market transactions – thus, the
externality. Some are positive (my neighbor who lives to the left
of me, has a flower garden that improves my quality of life and
he’s done all the work) and some are negative (my neighbor to the
right of me lowers the quality of my life with the two broken down
cars he keeps on his front lawn). Noting what has been mentioned
above, take a positive externality or a negative externality and
explore it in detail. Examine the role of social costs and
benefits, private costs and benefits, what role, if any, can the
government or even the private sector play in correcting the
externality, is there a free rider problem associated with it and
can it be corrected? As we attempt to correct for the externality
what additional tradeoffs may the private and/or pubic sectors
make? You should use graphs to help reinforce and bolster your
argument.