production externalities - ορισμός. Τι είναι το production externalities
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Τι (ποιος) είναι production externalities - ορισμός

Real externality; Pecuniary externalities

Externalities of automobiles         
  • Health Impacts of Automobility
OVERVIEW ABOUT THE EXTERNALITIES OF AUTOMOBILES
Automobile externalities; Negative externalities of automobiles; Externalities of automobiles
The externalities of automobiles, similarly to other economic externalities, are the measurable difference in costs for other parties to those of the car proprietor, such costs not taken into account when the proprietor opts to drive their car. According to Harvard University,
mass-produced         
  • The assembly plant of the Bell Aircraft Corporation in 1944. Note parts of [[overhead crane]] at both sides of photo near top.
  • Mass production of [[Consolidated B-32 Dominator]] airplanes at [[Consolidated Aircraft]] Plant No. 4, near Fort Worth, Texas, during World War II
  • Ford assembly line, 1913. The magneto assembly line was the first.
  • From old price tables it can be deduced that the capacity of a printing press around 1600, assuming a fifteen-hour workday, was between 3,200 and 3,600 impressions per day.}}</ref>
  • A pulley block for rigging on a sailing ship. By 1808, annual production in Portsmouth reached 130,000 blocks.
  • museum in Yekaterinburg, Russia]].
HIGH VOLUME PRODUCTION OF STANDARDIZED PRODUCTS
Mass-production; Mass produced; Mass-produce; Mass Production; Mass-produced; Continuous flow production; Serial production; Series production; Commercial-scale facility; Production-intent; Large-scale production; Flow production; Bulk production; Mass manufacturing; Standardized mass production; Standardised mass production; Mass-manufactured
Externality         
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  • [[Light pollution]] is an example of an externality because the consumption of street lighting has an effect on bystanders that is not compensated for by the consumers of the lighting.
  • Graph of Positive Externality in Production
  • Demand curve with external costs; if social costs are not accounted for price is too low to cover all costs and hence quantity produced is unnecessarily high (because the producers of the good and their customers are essentially underpaying the total, real [[factors of production]].)
  • Supply curve with external benefits; when the market does not account for the additional social benefits of a good both the price for the good and the quantity produced are lower than the market could bear.
  • "Relative percentage price [∆] increases for broad categories [...] when externalities of greenhouse gas emissions are included in the producer's price."<ref name="10.1038/s41467-020-19474-6"/>
IMPACT ON ANY PARTY NOT INVOLVED IN A GIVEN ECONOMIC TRANSACTION OR ACT
Externalities; Negative externality; Positive externality; External cost; Negative externalities; Positive externalities; Internalisation of Externalities; External benefit; External costs; Cost externalization; Positional Externalities; Positional Externality; Market externality; External benefits; Social and Private benefits; Externalized costs; Externalised costs; Negative Externalities; Positional externalities; Cost externalizing
·noun separation from the perceiving mind.
II. Externality ·noun State of being external; exteriority.

Βικιπαίδεια

Pecuniary externality

A pecuniary externality occurs when the actions of an economic agent cause an increase or decrease in market prices. For example, an influx of city-dwellers buying second homes in a rural area can drive up house prices, making it difficult for young people in the area to buy a house. The externality operates through prices rather than through real resource effects.

This is in contrast with technological or real externalities that have a direct resource effect on a third party. For example, pollution from a factory directly harms the environment. As with real externalities, pecuniary externalities can be either positive (favorable, as when consumers face a lower price) or negative (unfavorable, as when they face a higher price).

The distinction between pecuniary and technological externalities was originally introduced by Jacob Viner, who did not use the term externalities explicitly but distinguished between economies (positive externalities) and diseconomies (negative externalities).

Under complete markets, pecuniary externalities offset each other. For example, if someone buys whiskey and this raises the price of whiskey, the other consumers of whiskey will be worse off and the producers of whiskey will be better off. However, the loss to consumers is precisely offset by the gain to producers; therefore the resulting equilibrium is still Pareto efficient. As a result, some economists have suggested that pecuniary externalities are not really externalities and should not be called such.

However, when markets are incomplete or constrained, then pecuniary externalities are relevant for Pareto efficiency. The reason is that under incomplete markets, the relative marginal utilities of agents are not equated. Therefore, the welfare effects of a price movement on consumers and producers do not generally offset each other.

This inefficiency is particularly relevant in financial economics. When some agents are subject to financial constraints, then changes in their net worth or collateral that result from pecuniary externalities may have first order welfare implications. The free market equilibrium in such an environment is generally not considered Pareto efficient. This is an important welfare-theoretic justification for macroprudential regulation that may require the introduction of targeted policy tools.

Roland McKean was the first to distinguish technological and pecuniary effects.