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  2. Market failure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_failure

    Different economists have different views about what events are the sources of market failure. Mainstream economic analysis widely accepts that a market failure (relative to Pareto efficiency) can occur for three main reasons: if the market is "monopolised" or a small group of businesses hold significant market power, if production of the good or service results in an externality (external ...

  3. Shutdown (economics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shutdown_(economics)

    If market conditions improve, due to prices increasing or production costs falling, the firm can resume production. Shutting down is a short-run decision. [ 25 ] A firm that has shut down is not producing, but it still retains its capital assets; however, the firm cannot leave the industry or avoid its fixed costs in the short run.

  4. Anti-competitive practices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-competitive_practices

    Price fixing, where companies collude to set prices, effectively dismantling the free market by not engaging in competition with each other. In 2018, travel agency giant, Flight Centre was fined $12.5 million for encouraging a collusive price fixing plan between 3 international airlines from between 2005 and 2009.

  5. 4 surprising signs you’re no longer ‘middle class’ in America ...

    www.aol.com/finance/4-surprising-signs-no-longer...

    Masterworks will take care of the rest — making elite art investments accessible and hassle-free. Read more: Cost-of-living in America is still out of control — use these 3 'real assets' to ...

  6. Rate-of-return regulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rate-of-return_regulation

    Rate-of-return regulation (also cost-based regulation) is a system for setting the prices charged by government-regulated monopolies, such as public utilities.It attempts to set prices at efficient (non-monopolistic, competitive) levels [1] equal to the efficient costs of production, plus a government-permitted rate of return on capital.

  7. Free market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_market

    A free market does not directly require the existence of competition; however, it does require a framework that freely allows new market entrants. Hence, competition in a free market is a consequence of the conditions of a free market, including that market participants not be obstructed from following their profit motive.

  8. 6 Key Signs You’re a Financial Procrastinator and How It ...

    www.aol.com/finance/6-key-signs-financial...

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  9. Hochul signs NY law that will charge $75B to oil, gas and ...

    www.aol.com/news/hochul-signs-ny-law-charge...

    The oil giant Saudi Aramco of Saudi Arabia could be slapped with the largest annual assessment of any company — $640 million a year — for emitting 31,269 million tons of greenhouse gases from ...