When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Market failure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_failure

    Different economists have different views about what events are the sources of market failure. Mainstream economic analysis widely accepts that a market failure (relative to Pareto efficiency) can occur for three main reasons: if the market is "monopolised" or a small group of businesses hold significant market power, if production of the good or service results in an externality (external ...

  3. Marketing failure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marketing_failure

    A process failure occurs, by contrast, when, although the activity is completed successfully, the customer still perceives the way in which the activity is conducted to be below an expected standard or benchmark. Wan and Chan note that outcome and process failures are associated with different kinds of detrimental effects to the consumer.

  4. The Cost of Market Failures Is Rising - AOL

    www.aol.com/2013-09-20-the-cost-of-market...

    Although we don't believe in timing the market or panicking over daily movements, we do like to keep an eye on market changes -- just in case they're material to our investing thesis. Following ...

  5. Allocative efficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allocative_efficiency

    At this point, the net social benefit is maximized, meaning this is the allocative efficient outcome. When a market fails to allocate resources efficiently, there is said to be market failure. Market failure may occur because of imperfect knowledge, differentiated goods, concentrated market power (e.g., monopoly or oligopoly), or externalities.

  6. Imperfect competition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperfect_competition

    The imperfect market faces a down-ward sloping demand curve in contrast to a perfectly elastic demand curve in the perfectly competitive market. [3] This is because product differentiation and substitution occurs in the market. It is very easy for a consumer to change their seller which makes the consumer sensitive to price.

  7. Information asymmetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_asymmetry

    Information asymmetry occurs in situations where some parties have more information regarding an issue than others. It is considered a major cause of market failure. [56] The contribution of information asymmetry to market failure arises from the fact that it impairs with the free hand which is expected to guide how modern markets work.

  8. Natural monopoly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_monopoly

    Two different types of cost are important in microeconomics: marginal cost and fixed cost.The marginal cost is the cost to the company of serving one more customer. In an industry where a natural monopoly does not exist, the vast majority of industries, the marginal cost decreases with economies of scale, then increases as the company has growing pains (overworking its employees, bureaucracy ...

  9. Market (economics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_(economics)

    Used cars market: due to presence of fundamental asymmetrical information between seller and buyer the market equilibrium is not efficient—in the language of economists it is a market failure. Around the 1970s the study of market failures came into focus with the study of information asymmetry. In particular, three authors emerged from this ...