Production externalities Production externalities are side effects of industrial or business activity that affect third parties and are not reflected in the market price of the good or service. These effects can be economic, social, or environmental and may be positive or negative. Measuring production externalities Production externalities are typically measured as the difference between:
Private cost of production (borne by the producer) and
Social cost of production (borne by society at large). Explore More Resources

When private and social costs diverge, market outcomes may be inefficient: A. C. Pigou showed that externalities prevent achievement of Pareto optimality even under perfect competition. The presence of external costs or benefits means total social welfare equals private benefits/costs plus external benefits/costs. Types and examples Positive production externalities A positive externality (external benefit) occurs when production confers an unpriced benefit on others.
Beekeeping: bees pollinate neighboring crops, increasing yields beyond the beekeeper’s honey revenue.
Airport construction: improves access and foot traffic for local businesses.
Workplace first-aid training: raises safety skills that can help people outside the firm.
Demonstration effects from foreign firms: new technologies shown by one firm can raise productivity of local firms. Explore More Resources

Negative production externalities A negative externality (external cost) occurs when production imposes unpriced harms on others.
Industrial pollution: factories discharging waste into rivers or groundwater (e.g., documented water crises).
Deforestation/logging: the private cost of harvested trees understates the larger loss of ecosystem services from whole-forest removal.
Noise pollution: loud activity in an apartment building causing neighbors’ sleep disruption.
Antibiotic overuse in production: contributes to antibiotic-resistant infections.
* Ultra-processed food production: removal of fiber and added sugars contributing to public health issues (e.g., higher rates of metabolic disease). Other practical examples include traffic congestion from road use and secondhand smoke–related health problems. Explore More Resources

Impacts Production externalities can:
Distort market signals and resource allocation
Create public health and environmental harms
Impose unaccounted-for costs on communities
Generate incidental benefits that markets do not reward Policy approaches (overview) Common ways to address production externalities aim to internalize the external costs or benefits:
Taxes or fees (e.g., Pigouvian taxes) to reflect external costs in producer prices
Subsidies or incentives for activities that generate positive externalities
Regulation and standards limiting harmful byproducts
Property-rights solutions and tradable permits to align private incentives with social costs
* Public provision of goods or services when markets underprovide external benefits Explore More Resources

Key takeaways
* Production externalities are unintended side effects of production that affect third parties and are not priced into market transactions.
* They can be positive (external benefits) or negative (external costs).
* The social cost or benefit equals private cost/benefit plus external cost/benefit; divergences can lead to inefficiency.
* Addressing externalities typically requires policy interventions to internalize external costs or bolster external benefits.