Left to their own devices, steel mills dump pollutants into rivers because the cost is borne by downstream communities, not by the mill or its customers. Neighborhoods underinvest in vaccination because each individual captures only part of the herd immunity benefit. Buyers of used cars know far less about the vehicle's condition than the seller. Bridges, lighthouses, and national defense cannot be profitably provided by private markets. Each of these is a distinct type of market failure — a situation where the price mechanism produces systematically inefficient outcomes — and each has a corresponding policy response.
In plain terms
Market failure occurs when competitive markets do not allocate resources efficiently — when the market equilibrium produces less social welfare than is achievable. It is the condition under which free markets generate outcomes that diverge from the social optimum, creating a potential rationale for intervention.
The four main sources:
Externalities: costs or benefits that fall on parties not involved in the market transaction. A factory's pollution imposes costs on neighbors not reflected in the factory's price. A vaccination confers herd immunity benefits on others not captured in the individual's benefit calculation.
Public goods: goods that are non-excludable (you can't prevent non-payers from using them) and non-rival (one person's use doesn't reduce availability for others). Markets undersupply public goods because free-riding makes private provision unprofitable.
Information asymmetry: one party to a transaction has significantly better information than the other — creating adverse selection, moral hazard, and market thin-ness or collapse.
Market power: monopoly and oligopoly produce less output at higher prices than competitive markets, creating allocative inefficiency and deadweight loss.
Why it works this way
Each type of market failure corrupts the price signal in a different way. Externalities mean prices don't reflect full social costs or benefits. Public goods mean that private returns diverge from social returns. Asymmetric information means prices don't accurately reflect quality or risk. Market power means prices are set above marginal cost.
In all cases, the privately profitable equilibrium diverges from the socially optimal one — quantities are either too high (negative externality goods) or too low (positive externality goods, public goods) relative to the efficient allocation.
The EPA's regulatory impact analyses are formal market failure assessments: each regulation must document the market failure it corrects, estimate the efficiency gain from correction, and compare it against the cost of intervention. This cost-benefit framework is the institutional embodiment of market failure theory in regulatory practice.
A real example
The 2008 financial crisis involved multiple simultaneous market failures: information asymmetry in mortgage-backed securities (sellers knew more about loan quality than buyers); market power in credit rating agencies (three firms dominated, creating concentration without competitive discipline); and negative externalities in systemic risk (individual banks ignored the social cost of their leverage on the overall system). The Federal Reserve's post-crisis regulatory responses — stress testing, capital requirements, resolution planning — are market failure corrections targeting each of these channels.
Why it matters
Market failure is the necessary (but not sufficient) condition for government intervention to be welfare-improving. Without a market failure, competitive markets allocate resources efficiently and intervention reduces welfare. With a market failure, carefully designed intervention can improve outcomes. But government failure — poorly designed intervention that produces worse outcomes than the original market failure — is also real. The decision to intervene requires not just identifying the market failure but evaluating whether the proposed correction is likely to improve on the market outcome.





