- Nnanu, Friday Ben & Gobir, Mustapha Abdullahi, PhD.
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21082761
- SSR Journal of Economics, Business and Management (SSRJEBM)
Standard
economic models often look perfect on a whiteboard, but real-world markets
routinely fail to allocate resources efficiently. This paper looks at why that
happens, connecting classic problems like pollution with institutional
roadblocks, network monopolies, hidden information, and the quirky ways humans
actually make decisions (bounded rationality). We look closely at the climate
crisis, which isn’t just one big economic problem, but a messy cluster of them: unpriced carbon emissions, severe corporate
underinvestment in green research and development, and the chicken-and-egg
dilemma of building clean infrastructure. By looking at the tension between
market breakdowns and flawed political solutions (“government
failures”), we build a practical guide for policy design. Our main
takeaway is that silver-bullet solutions, like a single carbon tax, cannot fix
the system on their own. Instead, fixing deep-rooted market failures requires a
smart, coordinated mix of carbon pricing, clean-tech research and development
subsidies, and systemic infrastructure updates.
Keywords: Market Failure, Externalities, Climate Economics, Bounded Rationality, Coase Theorem, Institutional Economics.
