“to catch a thief”
DESCRIPTION
“To Catch a Thief”. “a polelike device that locks the steering wheel” sells for $29.95. “a radio transmitter” that “summons the police” if the car is stolen. Sells for $695 and is installed (mostly) on new cars. Police require that no LoJack decals be on cars. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
“To Catch a Thief” “a polelike device that locks the steering wheel” sells for $29.95
“a radio transmitter” that “summons the police” if the car is stolen.
Sells for $695 and is installed (mostly) on new cars.
Police require that no LoJack decals be on cars.
95% of stolen cars with LoJack are recovered versus 60% of stolen cars without LoJack.
ExternalitiesExternality—the behavior of one agent (person or firm) affects another agent in a way that is external to markets.
negative externalities, e.g., “The Club” (prob otherswill be stolen), chewing tobacco (disease andsoiling), alcohol (drunk driving), road salt (car damage), and antibiotics (disease resistantbacteria).
positive externalities, e.g., LoJack ( prob others will be stolen), meningitis vaccine (disease), and education (better citizens).
Observable by Criminals
Unobservable by Criminals
Founded in 1879
19th & Early 20th Century Chewing Tobacco
The founders of Mail Pouch came up with the idea when they noticed that people liked chewing the clippings of stogie wrappers.
Mail Pouch paid barn owners $1 to $2 a year and painted the rest of the barn as well.
19th and Early 20th Century Chewing Tobacco
Quotes from Richard Kluger’s, Ashes to Ashes
Chewing Tobacco:
Messy: spit aimed at “ubiquitous cuspidor(s)” hit “carpets, walls, draperies, and trousers. ”
Dangerous: “spreader of tuberculosis and other contagions.”
“splendidly suited” to 19th Century outdoor life
In early 20th Century:
Early 20th Century Courthouse
Cuspidor
S
PMKT
QMKT
D
QCT
PCT(private cost)
Social Cost
Q*Efficient Q
external cost—the health and cleanup costs imposed on others from tobacco spit.
Market for Chewing Tobacco (CT), 1900
The Market for Chewing Tobacco
PCT
QMKT > Q*
QCT
SMKT
Social Cost
Dexternal cost
Market Failure: Negative externalities cause markets to
For each pouch of chewing tobacco produced, the social cost includes the private costs of producing the chewing tobacco plus the cost to those bystanders adversely affected by the spit from that pouch.
Q’producing Q’
Social cost of
Private cost of
producing Q’
Q* QMKT
produce a larger quantity than is
efficient.
S
PMKT
QMKT
D
QCT
(private cost)
Social Cost
Q*
DWL in the Market for CT, 1900
Q’
B
A
PCT
QMKTQ* to are the excess pouchesof CT that society would rather
not produce from anefficiency
perspective.
Willingness to Pay for Q’(benefits)
Social Cost of Q’
= ____
= _______
B
BA +
Costs > Benefits by A
DWL due to Q’
DWL of Q*- QMKT
The onset of mouth ulcers and cancers caused by chewing tobacco is higher than typical smoking related diseases that affect your lungs, so guys who like chewing tobacco don’t like to chew ANYTHING ELSE—maybe even for the rest of their lives.
Who lovesa good
chew?
The Market for Chewing TobaccoIs this damage part of the negative externality? If not, where is it represented in the model?
PMKT
PCT
QMKTQ* QCT
SMKT
Social Cost
D
external cost
No* The expected health damage from chewing tobacco helps determine the demand for chewing tobacco.
The damage may still be the result of a market failure (lack of info) but not via an externality.
Caveat*: This damage could create a negative externalityvia the system of financing health care
PMKT
PCT
QMKTQ* QCT
Social Cost
Correcting the Market Failure
Changing incentives so people (or firms) take account of the external effects of their behaviors is called internalizing the externality.
SMKT
D
PMKT
PCT
QNTQT QCT
S
D
The government can internalize the externality by imposing a tax on chewing tobacco (assume that tobacco companies pay it).
STax(T)
external cost
tax
QT will equal Q* if the tax (per pouch) = the negative externality (per pouch).
MKTPT
S
D
QLJ
PLJ
(private cost)
Market for LoJack (LJ)
Social valuePMKT
External benefit (the value of in prob. that other cars will be stolen)
QMKTQ*
(private value)
Positive externalities cause markets to produce a smaller Q than is efficient.
DWL
Correcting the Market Failure
S
D
QLJ
PLJ
0
Social PMKT
External benefit
value
S
DQLJ
Subsidy
Ss
PLJ
PMKT
PS
0QMKT Q* QMKT QS
The government can internalize the externality by giving a subsidy to the producer of LoJack.
QS will equal Q* if the subsidy (per LoJack) = the positive externality (per LoJack).
Correcting the Market Failure
Alteratively, economists Ayres and Nalebuff “urge regulators to require insurers to give discounts to LoJack users.” Suppose the government requires insurers to give discounts of $200 to people who purchase LoJack.
S
D
QLJ
PLJ
0
Social PMKT
External benefit
value
S
DQLJ
$200
PLJ
PMKT
0QMKT Q* QMKT
D’
Q’
P’
Auto Thefts(# per 100,000 people)
LoJack was approved for use in Boston in 1986
Boston(port city)
Non-LoJack Cities
Empirical Study by Ayres and Levitt
Results: (1) 50% in Boston car thefts,were shut down in LA after LoJack arrived,
(2) 53 chop shops
(3) 1 theft annually per 3 LoJacks installed.
4000
3000
2000
1000