Intertemporal Markets Efficiency & Failure
Definition of Intertemporal Efficiency
Intertemporal efficiency means that a firm, government or nation maintains the right balance between resources used for current consumption as opposed to future use. Given the specific factors of production available in the economy, an increase in the production of consumption goods implies a decrease in the maximal amount of investment goods that can be produced.
The focus of many government policies is to achieve greater intertemporal efficiency so that we use our resources sustainably and current generations do not impose an unfair burden on future generations.
If the market mechanism is such that it ensures full employment with efficient production, then there is no hurdle in ensuring intertemporal efficiency. But in many cases, the market fails, entailing the case for government intervention to guard the public interest. The optimal stabilizing policy is the one which minimizes the deviations of the actual from the desired levels of target variables.
Through Diamond and Dybvig’s model, it can be proved that the monetary mechanism of risk-sharing may be able to elicit information regarding heterogeneous agents with lower communication costs and may provide some justification for such a role for policy in an intertemporal overlapping-generation setting.
Intertemporal Markets Efficiency
The focus of many government policies is to achieve greater intertemporal efficiency so that we use our resources sustainably and current generations do not impose an unfair burden on future generations. An intertemporal bias has its roots in Adam Smith’s work. From Smith’s day to the present times, economists have treated intertemporal trade-offs as different from other trade-offs that market participants face.
According to Mankiw, because resources are scarce, devoting more resources to producing capital requires devoting fewer resources to producing goods and services for current consumption. That is, for society to invest more in capital, it must consume less and save more of its current income. The growth that arises from capital formation is not a free lunch: it requires that society sacrifice consumption of goods and services in the present in order to enjoy higher consumption in the future.
Therefore, by encouraging savings and investment is one way that a government can encourage growth and, in the long run, raise the economy’s standard of living.” But the problem arises on what grounds would the government “encourage” people to make the intertemporal trade-off differently than they would make it without the encouragement.
Intertemporal Markets Failure
The intertemporal market failure occurs as the benefits of most of the public goods are experienced by the present generation while the costs will be borne by future generations. This mainly occurs because of uncertainty surrounding the benefits that future generations will require, for instance, the need for open space. It also occurs due to time preference.
Generally, people discount future benefits because they prefer to consume and prefer things now rather than in future. But when we look from society’s point of view, society has much longer time horizons and therefore cannot possibly discount the future benefits as individuals do.
This is the cause of the failure of intertemporal markets when it comes to social or public goods. Such goods will require intervention by the government to ensure the provision at all periods of time.
Read More in: Theory of Public Finance
- Public Finance: Meaning, Nature & Scope
- Role of Government in Economy
- Role of Government in Mixed Economy: Public & Private Sector
- Role of Government under Cooperation and Competition
- Role of Government in Economic Development and Planning
- Concept of Public Goods, Private Goods, and Merit Goods
- Concept of Market Failure and Functions of Government
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Decreasing Costs
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Externalities
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Public Goods
- Future Market: Meaning, Role & Uncertainty
- Concept of Information Asymmetry
- Theory of Second Best: Concept & Explanation
- Problem of Allocation of Resources: Public & Private Mechanisms
- Preferences: Meaning, Types & Problems of Preference Revelation
- Preference Aggregation & Its Mechanism
- Voting Systems, Direct Democracy, Representative Democracy, Leviathan Hypothesis & Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem
- Economic Theory of Democracy: Concept & Explanation
- Politico Eco Bureaucracy: Concept & Explanation
- Rent-Seeking and Directly Unproductive Profit-Seeking Activities
- Rationale for Public Goods: Concept & Explanation
- Benefit Theory or Voluntary Exchange Theory
- Lindahl Model: Concept, Equilibrium & Limitations
- Bowen Model: Concept, Advantages & Limitations
- Samuelson’s Model of Public Expenditure
- Musgrave’s Model of Public Expenditures
- Demand Revealing Schemes for Public Goods
- Vickery-Clarke-Groves Mechanism
- Groves-Ledyard Mechanism
- Tiebout Model: Concept, Assumptions Equilibrium & Simple Tiebout Model
- Theory of Club Goods
- Keynesian Principles of Stabilization Policy
- Difference Between Keynesian Economic Thought and Others
- Role of Expectations and Uncertainty in Formulating Stabilization Policy
- Intertemporal Markets Efficiency & Failure
- Liquidity Preference Theory
- Diamond-Dybvig Banking Model
- Preference Shocks, Adverse Selection & Central Bank
- Equilibrium Deposit Contract
- Social Goods and Its Effect on Stabilization Policy
- Effect of Infrastructural Facilities on Stabilization Policy
- Effect of Distributional Inequality on Stabilization Policy
- Effect of Regional Imbalances on Stabilization Policy
- Wagner’s Law of Increasing State Activities: Explanation, Graph & Criticism
- Peacock-Wiseman Hypothesis: Explanation, Graph & Criticism
- Public Expenditure: Concept, Objectives, & Public vs Private Expenditure
- Pure Theory of Public Expenditure
- Structure & Growth of Public Expenditure in India
- Trends, Lessons & Priorities in Public Expenditure in India
- Social Cost-Benefit Analysis: Project Evaluation, Estimation of Costs & Discount Rate
- Performance Based Budgeting and Zero Based Budgeting
- Theories of Tax Incidence: Concentration Theory, Diffusion Theory & Modern Theory
- Tax System and Its Principles
- Equity Principle and Efficiency Principle of Taxation: Meaning, Explanation & Examples
- Ability to Pay and Benefits Received Principle of Taxation
- Theory of Optimal Taxation: Excess Burden & Distortions of Taxation
- Deadweight Loss of Taxation: Causes, Measurement & Example
- Concept of Equity & Efficiency in Economics
- Trade-Off Between Equity and Efficiency: Meaning & Example
- Theory of Measurement of Dead Weight Loss
- Double Taxation: Meaning, Desirability, Forms & Solution
- Solution to Problem of Double Taxation: Intra-Country & International
- Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) and Indian Policy
- Classical View on Public Debt
- Compensatory Aspect of Public Debt Policy
- Public Debt or Borrowings: Concept, Need, Sources & Types
- Concept of Public Debt or Public Borrowings
- Need for Public Debt or Public Borrowing
- Sources of Public Debt
- Classification of Public Debt
- Burden of Public Debt: Meaning, Types & Explanation
- Debt Through Created Money or Deficit Financing
- Public Debt (Public Borrowings) and Inflation (Price Level)
- Crowding Out of Private Investment and Activity
- Principle of Public Debt Management and Debt Repayment