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Home›The Economy›Market Failures & Policy›Market Failures

Externality: The Cost or Benefit That Markets Forget to Price

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
5 sources3 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • An externality is a side effect of a transaction that affects parties not involved in it — and is not reflected in the market price
  • Negative externalities impose uncompensated costs on third parties — polluters, congestion, noise
  • Positive externalities confer uncompensated benefits on third parties — education, vaccination, R&D spillovers
  • Social cost = private cost + external cost; social benefit = private benefit + external benefit; efficient output sets social MB = social MC
On this page
  • In plain terms
  • Why it works this way
  • A real example
  • Why it matters

When a coal plant burns fuel to generate electricity, it releases carbon dioxide and particulates into the atmosphere. The electricity customer pays for fuel, labor, and capital — but not for the health costs of the particulates borne by neighboring communities, or the climate costs of the carbon borne by the global population. The transaction between the utility and its customers is complete, but a cost has been imposed on third parties who neither consented nor received compensation. That uncaptured cost is a negative externality — and it means the electricity market produces more power, and more pollution, than is socially optimal.

In plain terms

An externality is a cost or benefit that falls on parties external to a market transaction — neither buyers nor sellers — that is not reflected in the market price. The market transaction is between two parties; the externality affects a third.

Negative externality (external cost): the transaction imposes uncompensated costs on third parties. Examples: factory pollution, traffic congestion, secondhand smoke, antibiotic resistance from overuse, loud noise from a concert venue.

Positive externality (external benefit): the transaction confers uncompensated benefits on third parties. Examples: vaccination (providing herd immunity to non-vaccinated people), education (benefits to employers and communities beyond the student), research and development (knowledge spillovers to other firms), and restoring a historic building (improving neighborhood aesthetics).

Why it works this way

Markets price only private costs and benefits — the costs and gains experienced by the buyer and seller. When externalities exist, the social cost or social benefit diverges from the private:

Social cost = Private cost + External cost Social benefit = Private benefit + External benefit

Efficiency requires equating social marginal benefit to social marginal cost. When the market equates only private MB and MC, the result is:

  • Negative externalities: private MC < social MC → market overproduces (price doesn't reflect full cost)
  • Positive externalities: private MB < social MB → market underproduces (price doesn't capture full benefit)

The EPA's social cost of carbon estimate is the formal quantification of the external cost of carbon dioxide emissions — the cost imposed on third parties (future generations, distant communities) per ton of CO₂ emitted that is not reflected in the energy market price. It is the externality the EPA uses to justify carbon pricing policy.

A real example

The CDC's research on childhood lead exposure documents an enormous historical negative externality: leaded gasoline imposed neurological developmental costs on children for decades. These costs — reduced cognitive ability, higher rates of learning disability and behavioral problems — were borne entirely by children and families, not by the fuel industry or consumers who benefited from higher octane ratings. The externality was only corrected through regulatory prohibition of leaded gasoline.

Why it matters

Externalities are the most studied market failure because they are everywhere — in every production process that affects the environment, every health decision that creates spillover benefits or risks, every network that imposes congestion on other users. Identifying, quantifying, and correcting externalities is the central task of environmental economics, public health economics, and much of regulation. The policy toolkit — Pigouvian taxes, cap-and-trade, subsidies, and regulation — is designed to make private actors bear the full social cost or benefit of their decisions.

◆ Sources

  1. Social Cost of Carbon — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
  2. Childhood Lead Exposure — Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  3. Externality — Investopedia
  4. Externalities — Library of Economics and Liberty
  5. Guidelines for Economic Analysis — EPA
On this page
  • In plain terms
  • Why it works this way
  • A real example
  • Why it matters
◆ Related reading
  • The Free-Rider Problem: Why Public Goods Are Underprovided
  • Public Goods: What Markets Can't Provide on Their Own
  • Property Rights: The Foundation of Market Exchange
  • Negative Externalities: When Your Transaction Costs Someone Who Wasn't at the Table
All Market Failures →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

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