Social costs of pollution - definition. What is Social costs of pollution
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

FACTOR IN ECONOMICS
Social costs and benefits; Social costs; Social Costs; Social Cost
  • An illustration in which the marginal social costs exceed marginal private costs by the marginal external costs (or marginal damages). This is known as a negative production externality.

polluter         
  • Smog pollution in [[Taiwan]]
  • website=rainforests.mongabay.com}}</ref>
  • carbon dioxide emissions]] by jurisdiction (as of 2015)
  • The [[Lachine Canal]] in [[Montreal]], [[Quebec]], Canada
  • Air pollution in the US, 1973
  • A [[dust collector]] in [[Pristina]], [[Kosovo]]
  • date=2013-08-11 }} by Eric S. Lorenz. 2007.</ref>
  • Victoria]], Australia
  • [[Great Pacific garbage patch]]
  • A visual comparison of the free market and socially optimal outcomes
  • Air pollution produced by ships may alter clouds, affecting global temperatures.
  • [[Smog]] in the center of [[Moscow, Russia]] in August 2010
  • thermal oxidizer]], decomposes hazard gases from industrial air streams at a factory in the [[United States]].
  • An industrial area, with a power plant, south of [[Yangzhou]]'s downtown, [[China]]
  • Blue drain and yellow fish symbol used by the UK Environment Agency to raise awareness of the ecological impacts of contaminating surface drainage
INTRODUCTION OF CONTAMINANTS INTO THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT THAT CAUSE ADVERSE CHANGE
Environmental pollution; Polluted; Pollute; Environmental contaminant; Overpolluted; Polluting; Environmental contamination; Polluter; Environmental pollutants; Pollution control; Pollution prevention program; Polution; Land pollution; Contaminaton; Land Pollution; Natural causes of pollution; Earths pollution; Pollution controls; Pollution regulation; Pollution regulations; Industrial pollution; Environmental agent; Overpollution; Industrial Pollution; Control of pollution; Pollution abatement; Pollution Caused by Humans; Pollution prevention programs; Effects of pollution on humans; Health effects of pollution; Cost of pollution; Tropospheric pollution; Industrial contamination; Pollution limits; Causes of pollution; Urban pollution; Most polluting industries; Economic costs of pollution; Pollution and health; Pollution and disease; Health and pollution; Effects of pollution on health; Externalities of pollution; Zero pollution; Economic impact of pollution; Economic effects of pollution; Economics of pollution
(polluters)
A polluter is someone or something that pollutes the environment.
N-COUNT
polluted         
  • Smog pollution in [[Taiwan]]
  • website=rainforests.mongabay.com}}</ref>
  • carbon dioxide emissions]] by jurisdiction (as of 2015)
  • The [[Lachine Canal]] in [[Montreal]], [[Quebec]], Canada
  • Air pollution in the US, 1973
  • A [[dust collector]] in [[Pristina]], [[Kosovo]]
  • date=2013-08-11 }} by Eric S. Lorenz. 2007.</ref>
  • Victoria]], Australia
  • [[Great Pacific garbage patch]]
  • A visual comparison of the free market and socially optimal outcomes
  • Air pollution produced by ships may alter clouds, affecting global temperatures.
  • [[Smog]] in the center of [[Moscow, Russia]] in August 2010
  • thermal oxidizer]], decomposes hazard gases from industrial air streams at a factory in the [[United States]].
  • An industrial area, with a power plant, south of [[Yangzhou]]'s downtown, [[China]]
  • Blue drain and yellow fish symbol used by the UK Environment Agency to raise awareness of the ecological impacts of contaminating surface drainage
INTRODUCTION OF CONTAMINANTS INTO THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT THAT CAUSE ADVERSE CHANGE
Environmental pollution; Polluted; Pollute; Environmental contaminant; Overpolluted; Polluting; Environmental contamination; Polluter; Environmental pollutants; Pollution control; Pollution prevention program; Polution; Land pollution; Contaminaton; Land Pollution; Natural causes of pollution; Earths pollution; Pollution controls; Pollution regulation; Pollution regulations; Industrial pollution; Environmental agent; Overpollution; Industrial Pollution; Control of pollution; Pollution abatement; Pollution Caused by Humans; Pollution prevention programs; Effects of pollution on humans; Health effects of pollution; Cost of pollution; Tropospheric pollution; Industrial contamination; Pollution limits; Causes of pollution; Urban pollution; Most polluting industries; Economic costs of pollution; Pollution and health; Pollution and disease; Health and pollution; Effects of pollution on health; Externalities of pollution; Zero pollution; Economic impact of pollution; Economic effects of pollution; Economics of pollution
Pollute         
  • Smog pollution in [[Taiwan]]
  • website=rainforests.mongabay.com}}</ref>
  • carbon dioxide emissions]] by jurisdiction (as of 2015)
  • The [[Lachine Canal]] in [[Montreal]], [[Quebec]], Canada
  • Air pollution in the US, 1973
  • A [[dust collector]] in [[Pristina]], [[Kosovo]]
  • date=2013-08-11 }} by Eric S. Lorenz. 2007.</ref>
  • Victoria]], Australia
  • [[Great Pacific garbage patch]]
  • A visual comparison of the free market and socially optimal outcomes
  • Air pollution produced by ships may alter clouds, affecting global temperatures.
  • [[Smog]] in the center of [[Moscow, Russia]] in August 2010
  • thermal oxidizer]], decomposes hazard gases from industrial air streams at a factory in the [[United States]].
  • An industrial area, with a power plant, south of [[Yangzhou]]'s downtown, [[China]]
  • Blue drain and yellow fish symbol used by the UK Environment Agency to raise awareness of the ecological impacts of contaminating surface drainage
INTRODUCTION OF CONTAMINANTS INTO THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT THAT CAUSE ADVERSE CHANGE
Environmental pollution; Polluted; Pollute; Environmental contaminant; Overpolluted; Polluting; Environmental contamination; Polluter; Environmental pollutants; Pollution control; Pollution prevention program; Polution; Land pollution; Contaminaton; Land Pollution; Natural causes of pollution; Earths pollution; Pollution controls; Pollution regulation; Pollution regulations; Industrial pollution; Environmental agent; Overpollution; Industrial Pollution; Control of pollution; Pollution abatement; Pollution Caused by Humans; Pollution prevention programs; Effects of pollution on humans; Health effects of pollution; Cost of pollution; Tropospheric pollution; Industrial contamination; Pollution limits; Causes of pollution; Urban pollution; Most polluting industries; Economic costs of pollution; Pollution and health; Pollution and disease; Health and pollution; Effects of pollution on health; Externalities of pollution; Zero pollution; Economic impact of pollution; Economic effects of pollution; Economics of pollution
·adj Polluted.
II. Pollute ·vt To violate sexually; to Debauch; to Dishonor.
III. Pollute ·vt To render ceremonially unclean; to disqualify or unfit for sacred use or service, or for social intercourse.
IV. Pollute ·vt To make foul, impure, or unclean; to Defile; to Taint; to Soil; to Desecrate;
- used of physical or moral defilement.

ويكيبيديا

Social cost

Social cost in neoclassical economics is the sum of the private costs resulting from a transaction and the costs imposed on the consumers as a consequence of being exposed to the transaction for which they are not compensated or charged. In other words, it is the sum of private and external costs. This might be applied to any number of economic problems: for example, social cost of carbon has been explored to better understand the costs of carbon emissions for proposed economic solutions such as a carbon tax.

Private costs refer to direct costs to the producer for producing the good or service. Social cost includes these private costs and the additional costs (or external costs) associated with the production of the good which are not accounted for by the free market. In short, when the consequences of an action cannot be taken by the initiator, we will have external costs in the society. We will have private costs when initiator can take responsibility for agent's action.