The Coase Theorem - YouTube

Channel: Marginal Revolution University

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- [Alex] Today we're going to look at the Coase Theorem
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and market solutions to externality problems.
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Basically what Coase pointed out in a remarkable paper
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was that the problem with external benefits
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and external costs is not that they're external,
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but rather that property rights in these cases
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are vague and uncertain
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and that transactions costs are high.
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Let's get started with an example.
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The Nobel prize-winning economist, James Meade,
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argued that the market would underprovide
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honey and pollination services.
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Bees, Meade argued, do two things.
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First, they create honey.
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That honey is bought and sold in markets
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and there's a price for the honey.
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Second, however, bees will also fly out
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and they'll pollinate the crops of nearby farmers.
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That's a very useful service, but Meade argued
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that the farmers wouldn't be paying for that service.
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The pollination services, Meade argued,
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were an external benefit.
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Because the beekeepers were not being paid
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for these useful pollination services,
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there would be too few bees, and as a result, too little honey,
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and also too little crops and too little pollination services.
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However, another economist, Steven Cheung,
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proved that the Nobel Prize winner was wrong,
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and he did so by consulting the Yellow Pages.
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Cheung discovered that pollination in the United States, in fact,
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is a $15 billion industry.
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Beekeepers regularly truck their bee colonies
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around the country and they sell
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their pollination services to farmers.
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Because the farmers are paying the beekeepers
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for the services of the bees,
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the benefits in fact are not external,
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they're not on bystanders -- and the market works.
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So why did Meade get it wrong?
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What about the bees, and what about the farmers,
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made it possible for this externality problem
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to be solved by markets
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when many other externality problems are not?
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The market for pollination works
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despite the fact that bees seem to create this external benefit
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because transactions costs are low.
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That is, all of the costs necessary for buyers and sellers
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to reach an agreement are low.
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In particular, bees simply don't fly very far.
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So an agreement between one beekeeper and one farmer
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can internalize all the externality.
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That is, if the beekeeper puts his bees
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in the middle of the farm,
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basically the only crops which are going to be pollinated
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are the crops of that single farmer.
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So once an agreement is made
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between that beekeeper and that farmer,
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all of the externalities have been internalized.
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There are no bystanders
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once the beekeeper and the farmer make an agreement.
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Moreover, the property rights here are very clear.
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The beekeeper has the rights to the honey.
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The farmer owns the crops that the bees pollinate.
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There isn't going to be a lot of bargaining and disagreement
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about who owns what.
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The property rights are clear.
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In other cases of externalities,
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some of the ones we've looked at previously,
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neither of these things are true.
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Transactions costs are high and property rights are unclear.
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Let's compare with pollution and flu shots.
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In both cases here, the transactions costs are high
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and property rights are unclear and uncertain.
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Consider pollution: there's an external cost --
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the factory is putting lots of pollution up into the sky,
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but on who?
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It's not necessarily on the people
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who live right next door to the factory.
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The pollution could be causing acid rain,
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which is ruining lakes hundreds of miles away,
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or it could be causing global warming
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which is increasing sea levels
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and ruining people's lives thousands of miles away.
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And exactly what are the costs? How much?
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How can we measure these costs? It's not obvious.
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Moreover, who has the rights here?
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Should the factory have to pay to pollute?
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Should it have to pay the people
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to whom it imposes an external cost?
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Or, should the bystanders have to pay the factory not to pollute?
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Does the factory have the right not to pollute,
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and do the bystanders have to pay the factory to stop?
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If you think that's obvious, let's consider a flu shot.
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There are external benefits.
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If I get a flu shot, for example,
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I'm less likely to sneeze on people on the subway
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and give them the flu.
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But that could be hundreds,
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dozens of people, hundreds of people.
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I don't know exactly which people get the external benefit.
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And how much is this external benefit?
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It's hard to measure, once again.
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Moreover, should people have to pay me to get a flu shot
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or should I have to pay others if I don't get a shot?
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Now, by the way, let's compare these two things --
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the pollution and the flu shot.
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If you thought it was obvious
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that the factory should have to pay to pollute
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and not that the bystanders should have to pay the factory,
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well, consider the flu shot.
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Isn't sneezing, if you don't get a flu shot,
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isn't sneezing, isn't that like pollution?
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Isn't that polluting?
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Shouldn't the polluter, the sneezer have to pay?
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So in that case you might want to argue
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that if you don't get a flu shot, you should have to pay others.
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You're polluting on them, right?
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So the rights here are not as obvious
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as we might think at first glance.
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Moreover, the main point is that the transactions costs
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of coming to an agreement
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between these hundreds or thousands
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or perhaps millions of people,
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figuring out what the external costs are,
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making that bargain, that's going to be very costly.
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And, we can't even agree on who has the rights here,
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or it's very difficult to come to an agreement.
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Should the factory have to pay?
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Should the factory be the one to be paid?
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Should the person getting the flu shot be paid,
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or should the person not getting the flu shot have to pay?
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The rights here are uncertain, and unclear, and again,
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that's also going to make coming to a market agreement
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difficult to do,
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and therefore the market isn't going to solve these types
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of externality problems very easily.
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So the conclusion here is that the market can be efficient
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even when there are externalities --
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when transactions costs are low
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and when property rights are clearly defined.
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And in fact that's the Coase Theorem.
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If transactions costs are low
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and property rights are clearly defined,
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private bargains will ensure
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that the market equilibrium is efficient
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even if there are externalities.
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The conditions for the Coase Theorem to be met --
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low transactions costs and clear property rights --
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are in practice often not met.
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Even so, however, the theorem does suggest
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an alternative approach to externalities.
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We've already looked at Pigouvian taxes and subsidies,
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and command and control.
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The Coase Theorem suggests another solution,
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namely the creation of new markets.
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If the government can define property rights
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and reduce transactions costs,
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then markets can be used to control externality problems.
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So the Coase Theorem plus a little bit of command and control
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in terms of defining property rights and reducing transactions costs,
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can create a new form of solution to externality problems.
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And in fact tradable permits is what we're going to be looking at
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in the next talk.
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- [Narrator] If you want to test yourself,
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click "Practice Questions."
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Or, if you're ready to move on, just click "Next Video."
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