Externality - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In economics, an externality or spillover of an economic transaction is an impact on a party that is not directly involved in the transaction. In such a case, prices do not reflect the full costs ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Externality
Often the primary argument against these 'pollution solutions' begins with a logic of cost. Opponents to these ... Smokers, so the logic goes, harm not only themselves, but others who breath their smoke second hand, when they smoke inside poorly ventilated buildings. This would be considered a negative externality.
greennature.com/article473.html
Solving the Negative Externality Problem ... A negative externality occurs when an individual or firm making a decision does not have to pay the full cost of the decision. If a good has a ... A common example of a negative externality is pollution. For example, a steel producing firm might pump pollutants into the air.
economics.fundamentalfinance.com/negative-externality.p... economics.fundamentalfinance.com/negative-externality.php
_Negative Externality: Pollution _; By: Ken Sheehy Negative Externality: Pollution Pollution has become a heated issue in recent years. The destruction of the environment along with serious health problems are the eventual effects.
essay.studyarea.com/Old_Essay/Economics/negative_extern... essay.studyarea.com/Old_Essay/Economics/negative_externality_pollution.htm
Negative externalities, unfortunately, are much more common. Pollution is a very common negative externality. A company that pollutes loses no money in doing so, but society must pay heavily to take care of the problem pollution caused.
library.thinkquest.org/26026/Economics/externality.html library.thinkquest.org/26026/Economics/externality.html
Interestingly, you - as an individual - do not account for this in the costs of driving, however society pays the costs of dealing with air pollution. Therefore, car pollution is a negative externality.
www.bized.co.uk/virtual/vla/theories/negative_externali... www.bized.co.uk/virtual/vla/theories/negative_externalities.htm
The reason for this is that pollution is a negative externality. ... An example of a negative externality is air pollution by an oil refinery. ...
sorrel.humboldt.edu/~economic/econ104/pollute/ sorrel.humboldt.edu/~economic/econ104/pollute/
For example, if a company pollutes the atmosphere but pays nothing to the government or the community for this, then the pollution becomes an externality. ... (redirected from Negative externality)
encyclopedia.farlex.com/Negative+externality encyclopedia.farlex.com/Negative+externality
Endogenous growth is generally built on a positive externality hypothesis which is the opposite of a negative externality caused by pollution. We study a linear technology with simple assumption: an aggregate capital stock which represents a learning by doing effect and a pollution flow proportional to production.
ideas.repec.org/a/kap/enreec/v6y1995i3p279-300.html
Consider the standard demand and supply diagram with pollution (click on the thumbnail to the right for a bigger image). An unregulated market leads to equilibrium price and ... Environmental regulation is designed to get firms to "internalize the externality" by considering the external costs of production.
www.env-econ.net/negative-externality.html www.env-econ.net/negative-externality.html