The term “market failure” does not imply that markets are inherently flawed nor that non-market solutions are automatically superior. In economic consulting, it describes a set of specific, defined conditions under which unassisted market interactions produce outcomes that diverge from a defined benchmark—typically allocative efficiency (Pareto optimality) or, in policy-oriented work, equity. This article neutrally catalogs the principal categories of market failure, describes observable symptoms, and notes common diagnostic approaches. No recommendation for intervention is made or implied.
To speak of failure, one must first specify success. The standard benchmark is perfect competition as defined in Article 1. In that idealized setting, the equilibrium price equals marginal cost, and total surplus (consumer plus producer surplus) is maximized. Deviations from that benchmark constitute an efficiency-based market failure. However, many real-world markets deviate trivially; only significant, persistent, and quantifiable deviations are typically treated as analytically meaningful failures.
An externality occurs when a transaction between two parties imposes uncompensated costs (negative externality) or confers unremunerated benefits (positive externality) on third parties.
Examples:
Observable symptoms:
Diagnostic approaches:
Crucially, an externality is a descriptive observation. Whether any party should internalize it via tax, subsidy, property rights assignment, or regulation is a separate policy question outside neutral market description.
A public good has two technical properties: non-rivalry (one person’s consumption does not reduce availability for others) and non-excludability (preventing non-payers from consuming is infeasible or excessively costly).
Examples:
Observable symptoms:
Diagnostic approaches:
Public goods are not “better” or “worse” than private goods. They simply describe a technical condition that explains why private markets may not supply them in expected quantities.
When one party to a transaction possesses more or better information than the other, market outcomes may differ systematically from perfect-information predictions.
Subtypes:
Observable symptoms:
Diagnostic approaches:
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