Market failure in economics refers to situations where the free market mechanism fails to allocate goods and services efficiently, resulting in a non-Pareto-optimal distribution of resources and a net loss of economic value. This typically occurs when markets do not function properly and cannot achieve maximum efficiency. Common causes of market failure include imperfect competition (such as monopolies), externalities (impacts of production or consumption on third parties, such as pollution), underprovision of public goods (e.g., national defense), information asymmetry, incomplete competition, and macroeconomic imbalances (such as unemployment and inflation). When market failure occurs, intervention by governments or other institutions may help correct these inefficiencies and lead to improved resource allocation and social welfare.