Government Failure (AQA A Level Economics)

Revision Note

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Claire France

Written by: Claire France

Reviewed by: Steve Vorster

Government Failure

  • Government failure occurs when the government intervenes in a market to correct market failure, but the intervention results in a misallocation of resources from society's point of view

    • Government intervention has reduced overall economic welfare

  • By intervening in a market, a government often creates market distortions which contribute to or cause market failure

Causes of Government Failure

  • The consequences of government failure can range in severity

  • A policy decision could be ineffective if it fails to create enough of an incentive to change behaviour

  • Government policy decisions could also worsen the original market failure or create a new market failure

Causes and Examples of Government Failure


Cause


Explanation


Example

Inadequate information

  • Governments and regulators do not have perfect information or they often do not understand the market they are trying to regulate

  • Government decision making is subject to the same information gaps and cognitive biases (e.g. anchoring) that consumers face

·       

  • Many financial markets are fast moving and incredibly complex

    • Government regulators find it difficult to keep pace with the change of products

Conflicting objectives

  • The implementation of one policy can come at the expense of achieving another

  • The government has to make a trade-off that it believes will maximise social welfare

    • Governments often face a trade-off between achieving long term and short term policy objectives

  • The government may want to achieve both economic growth and environmental protection

  • These goals may be in conflict

    • E.g In the UK there is much debate about the issuing of new offshore gas drilling licences. They will generate economic growth but lead to environmental degradation

Administrative costs

  • Regulation or administration costs can be expensive

  • The costs of intervention can sometimes be greater than the savings in social welfare, leading to a worsening of allocation of resources

  • The cost of recruiting and paying staff to ensure firms are adhering to regulation may exceed the size of the external cost from the market failure 

Market distortions

 

  • Price intervention may help to solve one problem but creates others by distorting price signals

  • The signalling function of the price mechanism is artificially altered

  • This can lead to an inefficient allocation of resources, surpluses and shortages

  • A minimum price sends a signal to producers to supply more

    • In agricultural markets this has often resulted in an excess of perishable products which end up going to waste 

  • A maximum price sends a signal to producers to supply less

    • In pharmaceutical markets, this has led to excess demand of products

Unintended consequences

 

  • Consequences that are unforeseen may occur

  • Producers and consumers aim to maximise their self interest

    • This often leads them to look for legal or illegal loop holes to bypass government intervention

    • This result creates unintended consequences such as the creation of illegal markets and/or illegal production/consumption

 

  • Reduced consumption of alcohol due to minimum pricing, may lead to an increase in consumption of more harmful intoxicants as they become relatively cheaper 

Regulatory capture

 

  • Regulatory capture occurs when firms influence the regulators to change their decisions/policies to align more with the interests of the firm

    • Firms spend millions lobbying regulators or politicians who can issue instructions to the regulatory

  • Some lobbying activity is corrupt, and there is a fine line between influencing activity and bribing

  • In 2021 the former UK Prime Minister, David Cameron, was caught in an embarrassing case of lobbying for a failed financial venture by a firm called Greensill Capital


Examiner Tips and Tricks

Government intervention can worsen economic welfare, leading to a deeper or even new market failure.

Remember that in practice, one single intervention is often unlikely to solve deep-rooted problems that cause market failure. It is likely that a combination of policies will be more effective, i.e. those that target the demand and supply-side of the market.

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Claire France

Author: Claire France

Expertise: Economics Content Creator

Claire has taught A Level and GCSE Maths and Economics as well as teaching Economics at a University in the UK. She is an AQA examiner and a successful subject lead. She loves creating informative resources that engage learners and build their passion for the subject.

Steve Vorster

Author: Steve Vorster

Expertise: Economics & Business Subject Lead

Steve has taught A Level, GCSE, IGCSE Business and Economics - as well as IBDP Economics and Business Management. He is an IBDP Examiner and IGCSE textbook author. His students regularly achieve 90-100% in their final exams. Steve has been the Assistant Head of Sixth Form for a school in Devon, and Head of Economics at the world's largest International school in Singapore. He loves to create resources which speed up student learning and are easily accessible by all.