externality

એકસટર્નાલિટીઝ
definition
noun
The first is to address negative externalities that aren't reflected in market prices.
a side effect or consequence of an industrial or commercial activity that affects other parties without this being reflected in the cost of the goods or services involved, such as the pollination of surrounding crops by bees kept for honey.
It is desire that opens up the moment of externality , or the reaching beyond the limits of the subject.
the fact of existing outside the perceiving subject.
example
This fracturing of the sovereign self signals the demise of that spectacular and unique persona and the displacement of regal 'externality' by what Francis Barker has called ‘an interior subjectivity.’
Furthermore, Bourdieu speaks of habitus, a social space and a disposition to act in certain ways, which is the result of the internalization of 'externality' and the externalization of interiority.
It is desire that opens up the moment of 'externality' , or the reaching beyond the limits of the subject.
And there is a particular kind of negative 'externality' .
Moreover, a theoretical link has been established between 'externality' and the etiology of depression.
The first is to address negative 'externalities' that aren't reflected in market prices.
Governments can set water prices but this will only achieve efficient prices if the environmental 'externalities' can be measured accurately.
In contrast, standards and network 'externalities' do not affect biotechnology industry dynamics.
But ASI forgets that economic activity produces 'externalities' ; real costs to third parties.
Network 'externalities' occur when markets characterized by network effects fail to allocate resources properly.
Credits: Google Translate