Market Failures, Taxes, and Subsidies: Crash Course Economics #21 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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Jacob: I’m Jacob Clifford
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Adriene: and I’m Adriene Hill and welcome to Crash Course Economics.
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Jacob: In the last few videos we’ve said a lot of nice things about how competitive
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markets allocate resources. You know, they do a pretty good job.
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Adriene: But nobody’s perfect. Sometimes markets get it wrong. Sometimes they fail.
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Sometimes the byproducts of production make people sick. Today we are going to talk about
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those market failures, and how economists address them.
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[Theme Music]
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In 2105, a story made the rounds online about a University of Maryland professor and an
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extra credit question: "Select whether you want 2 points or 6 points added onto your
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final paper grade. But there’s a small catch...if more than 10% of the class selects 6 points,
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then no one gets any points." So, what would you do?
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The question alludes to one of the biggest problems with free markets: sometimes people
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have a personal incentive to do something that is against the collective interests of
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the group. Obviously, everyone wants at least some extra credit, but there is also an incentive
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to get even more points. In this situation, the professor reported that too many people
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chose 6 points and no one got extra credit.
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Let's say that your local government sent a similar proposition to every household in
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your city, “Select whether you want to pay $20 or $100 to fund the local fire department,
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but there’s a small catch: if more than 50% of citizens choose $20 there's not going
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to be enough money to have a fire department.”
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This is the free rider problem. Free riders are people who benefit without paying. They
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are not necessarily evil, let’s face it, you probably know someone that's illegally
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downloaded Game of Thrones, but they're responding to incentives -- why pay more, if I can get it for less?
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If too many people think like this, then we're all worse off and we're going to end up not
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getting the things we want like fire protection or a satisfying ending to Game of Thrones.
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So how do most cities get around the problem that some people will benefit even if they
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don’t pay. The city doesn’t ask for money, they demand money in the form of taxes. The
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reasoning is that fire protection is so essential that people shouldn’t be allowed to opt out.
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Jacob: So things that are for our collective well being, like fire protection, schools,
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and national defense are often funded by the government. When markets alone fail to provide
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enough of these things, that's called market failures. These are often called public goods,
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but the technical definition of a public good is anything that has two characteristics:
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non-exclusion and non-rivalry. Non-exclusion is the idea that you can't exclude people
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that don’t pay. For example, it's impossible to limit the benefits of national defense
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to only people that pay their taxes. People who pay no federal taxes still get the benefit
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of protection from bombs, and people who pay a lot of federal taxes don’t get extra protection.
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Non-rivalry is the idea that one person’s consumption of the good doesn’t ruin it
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for other people. So, public parks are a great example. You can use it today, I can use it
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tomorrow; it can be shared. Ideally.
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If a good or service meets these two criteria it's unlikely that private firms will produce
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it, no matter how essential it is. Street lights and organizations that track and prevent the spread of
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diseases are pretty important, and if the government doesn’t step in, we probably won’t get them.
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Adriene: The incentive to do what's best for you, rather than what's best for everyone
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is the root cause of something economists call the Tragedy of the Commons. This is the
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idea that common goods that everyone has access to are often misused and exploited. It explains
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the cause of most of our environmental problems like air pollution, deforestation, the killing
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of endangered species, and overfishing.
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In many places in the world, there are more fish being pulled out of rivers, lakes, and
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oceans than are being born. This is not just bad for the fish; it’s bad for the people
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doing the fishing. As these resources are depleted, fishermen find themselves without a job.
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So why aren’t they conserving? Allowing fish to reproduce and generate more fish resources
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for the future? Well, look at the incentives. If a few environmentally conscious fishermen
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decide to give the fish time to spawn, then some other fisherman will harvest them instead.
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If you can’t prevent other people from exploiting the resource, then you have an incentive to
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exploit it yourself and take as much as you can, as quickly as you can.
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But, with everyone following that logic, the finite resource gets pillaged. The Tragedy
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of the Commons explains why fish stocks get depleted, the rainforest get cut down, and
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why endangered species get hunted for their hides or horns. There is an entire subfield
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of economics focused on address and solving these issues, it is called environmental economics.
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Jacob: The problem here is that unregulated markets sometimes don’t produce the outcome
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that society wants. Remember, sometimes markets misallocate resources because they don't have
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the right price signals. There is no better example of this than what economists call
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externalities. Externalities are situations when there's an external costs or external
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benefits that accrue to other people or society as a whole. When other people are made worse
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off that's called a negative externality. When other people are made better off
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that's called a positive externality. Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.
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Let’s look at a TV factory that pollutes a river with toxic chemicals. This is definitely
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a negative externality. The factory has internal costs: it has to pay its workers, buy raw
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materials, pay for energy; and it uses those costs to determine how many TVs to produce.
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But there are also external costs associated with polluting the waterways, like dead fish,
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contaminated drinking water, and people getting sick. Those external costs are paid by people
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downstream, and they are likely to be ignored by the factory owner. The free market assumes
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that all the costs associated with producing TVs are accounted for within the price of
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those TVs, but, in this case, the market is wrong. The end result is a market failure
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because the factory is producing too many TVs.
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As for positive externalities. Think of education. More education is great for you.
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You'll likely generate more income and it makes you more interesting to talk to at parties.
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But there are also external benefits of your education. Everyone is actually made better off.
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With more education you're more likely be a positive and productive member of society.
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And if you earn a higher income, that means more tax revenue.
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Now in both cases, negative and positive externalities, economists often look to the government to
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step in and solve the problem. For example, the government could tax the TV factory or
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subsidize education. In fact, externalities are the justification for almost everything
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the government does. When politicians, tax cigarettes, fund education, subsidize fuel
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efficient cars, or regulate financial markets, it's because they are convinced that free
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markets alone are not adjusting for externalities.
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Adriene: Thanks Thought Bubble. We’ve tried to explain the problem of externalities, now
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let’s talk about the solutions. When the government tries to fix externalities they
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can use regulatory policies or market-based policies.
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Regulatory policies are simply rules established by government decree. Some people complain
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about regulation. They say, “the government can’t tell me what to do.” But let's be
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honest, it can. The government also spends a ton of time and money telling you what you
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can’t do. Don’t drive too fast. Don’t build a house in Yellowstone. Don’t kill anybody.
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It seems like the government probably should regulate some stuff. The question is, “how
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much should they regulate?” Even people who adamantly oppose government regulation
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probably agree that nuclear weapons and nerve gas shouldn't be on the shelves at Target.
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Let’s go back to the TV factory example. To help solve the pollution externality, the
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government could ban the use of certain types of chemicals or set a production quota to
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limit the production of TVs or regulate what can be dumped in the river. In the US, the
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Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has pushed for laws to control pollution, and
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these regulations have worked.
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Regulation can also create positive externalities. In some cases, the external benefits are perceived
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to be so high that the government essentially takes over the market. Consider education.
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Most countries have compulsory education which requires citizens to be educated up to a specific
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age and the government pays for schools through taxes.
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If the government didn’t get involved, all education would be provided by private schools
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that would charge tuition; there might not be enough affordable schools to educate young
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people. The government funds education because they think that the external benefits, like
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literate, well-informed, erudite citizens, are so high it's worth forcing everyone to pay.
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Jacob: Another way that governments try to solve externalities is with market-based policies.
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These are policies designed to manipulate markets, prices, and incentives to correct
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for market failures. The best examples are taxes and subsidies. A tax on the production
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of TVs or on the chemicals the factory is using will decrease production and limit pollution.
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Federal grants that help subsidize college education will increase the amount of education people buy.
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In general, economists tend to prefer market-based policies. Take cigarettes. Cigarettes generate
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high external costs on society. There's second hand smoke and there's higher healthcare costs
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for everyone, due to smoking related illnesses.
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The government could force cigarettes companies to produce less, or just shut them down entirely,
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but instead they tax cigarettes. The tax drives up the price, consumers buy fewer cigarettes,
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and this addresses the negative externality. Now, this market-based approach has one key
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advantage over the regulatory approach. Instead of spending money on enforcing regulations,
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the government is earning tax revenue that can be used for purposes. In real life, though,
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governments often use both policies. In the US, the government taxes cigarette producers
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and regulates where people can smoke. It also restricts how tobacco companies can advertise,
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and supports anti-smoking campaigns designed to convince people to quit smoking.
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Seriously, you should stop smoking.
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Market-based approaches to reduce negative externalities are also used to fight climate
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change. Many economists argue that taxes on carbon-based fuels like coal, oil, and gas
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are a more effective way to deal with air pollution.
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Adriene: One oft-discussed market-based policy is emissions trading or “cap and trade.”
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The government issues pollution permits and if your factory doesn’t hold one of those
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permits, it can’t pollute. But companies can buy or sell those permits.
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This sets up incentives to go green: if you can produce without pollution, you can make
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money by selling your permits. But if you operate a dirty plant, you have to pay for
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those extra permits. As controversial as cap and trade can be among American politicians,
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it’s interesting to note that it's already been used successfully in the US.
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A cap and trade program to reduce acid rain pollution -- it worked! It cut sulfur dioxide
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emissions. According to a 2003 report from the Office of Management and Budget, “the
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Acid Rain Program accounted for the largest quantified human health benefits of any major
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federal regulatory program implemented in the last 10 years, with benefits exceeding
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costs by more than 40:1.”
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Remember that extra credit question? What if the world’s largest economies were given
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a similar proposition: “Select whether you want to decrease your pollution by 5% or 30%,
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with a small catch; if more than 50% of counties choose only 5% then climate change will make Earth unlivable."
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That simplifies the issue, but it does illustrate why it's so hard to address climate change.
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Individual countries might work to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, but they can’t
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prevent other countries from polluting. It’s the Tragedy of the Commons.
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In an unregulated global economy, where producers want to make products as cheaply as possible,
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there's an incentive to ignore international environment to get ahead. Global issues like
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climate change, human rights abuses, and nuclear proliferation can't be effectively addressed
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if countries don’t work together. But that requires a lot of trust and a lot of commitment.
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Jacob: So markets aren't perfect. There are many cases when the government should get
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involved, and there's even some situations when the government should just take control.
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Adriene: The question isn’t “which is better: free markets or government?” The
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question is “how can they work together to make our lives better?”
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Thanks for watching, we’ll see you next week.
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Crash Course Economics is made with the help of all these fine people. You can support
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Course free for everyone, forever. And you get great rewards. Thanks for watching, and DFTBA!