When private sector assets are sold to the public sector, i.e. the government gains control of an industry.
By nationalising an industry, natural monopolies are created. It is inefficient otherwise. (e.g. more ideal to have one set of water pipes)
Social welfare might be a priority of a nationalised industry.
Privatisation
Assets are transferred from the public sector to the private sector, i.e. the government sells a firm so that it is no longer in their control.
Privatisation
The firm is left to the free market and private individuals.
Free market economists will argue that the private sector gives firms incentives to operate efficiently, which increases economic welfare. This is due to their profit incentive.
In the free market, firms want to produce what consumers demand. This increases allocative efficiency and maybe even quality.
Competition in a free market could result in lower prices.
By selling an asset, revenue is raised for the government. However, this is only a one-off payment.
By using regulation, the government could use laws to ban consumers from consuming a good.
E.g. minimum school leaving age means young people need to be in education till 16 and education or training till 18; this has positive externalities in the form of a higher skilled workforce.
Firms which fail to follow regulations could face heavy fines, which acts as a disincentive to break the rule.
Deregulation
Act of reducing how much an industry is regulated.
Deregulation
Decreases government power and enhances competition.
Excessive regulation is also called 'red tape'.
It can limit the quantity of output that a firm produces.
Excessive taxes, such as high rate of corporation tax, might discourage firms earning above a certain level of profit, since they donot keep as much of it. This might limit the size that a firm chooses, or is able to, grow to.
Regulatory capture
When regulators start acting in the interests of the company, due to impartial information, rather than in consumer interests.
Without sufficient information, governments could make poor decisions and it could lead to a waste of scarce resources.