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Market Failures and Government Regulation: Is the Cure Worse Than the Disease?

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In this lesson, from EconEdLink, students explore the costs and benefits associated with economic and social regulation. Economic efficiency is something much more than producing goods at the lowest possible cost. It involves providing individuals with the goods and services they desire, in the quantities, qualities, places, and times they desire them, with the least use of society's scarce resources. Economists argue that if markets are competitive, if accurate information is available, if resources are mobile, and if individuals engaging in the transactions bear the full costs and receive the full benefits of their transactions, economic efficiency will be achieved. Less

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    Grade: 9 to 12

    Topics: History-Social Science, Economics, American Democracy, Mathematics, United States History

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