ECON 1110 Chapter Notes - Chapter 17: Free Rider Problem, Private Good, Traffic Congestion

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Chapter 17: Public Goods and Common Resources
1. Public Good: A good that benefits many people, whether or not they have paid for it,
and whose benefits to any one individual do not depend on how many others also
benefit
a. Cannot be efficiently supplied by the market
b. Good that is both nonexcludable and nonrival in consumption
i. No private firms are willing to produce them
ii. Suffer from the free rider problem
iii. Nonrival in consumption, so it’s inefficient to charge people for consuming
them
iv. The marginal social benefit of a unit of the good equals the sum the
individual marginal benefits that are enjoyed by all consumers of that unit
v. Examples: Disease prevention, national defense, scientific research
2. Common Resource: A good that many people can consume whether or not they have
paid for it but whose consumption by each person reduces the amount available to
others
a. Nonexcludable and rival in consumption
b. Example: Fishing in a public lake; you aren’t charged for fishing, but your fishing
imposes costs on others
3. The characteristics of goods often determine whether markets can deliver them
efficiently
4. If a good is to be efficiently provided by a market economy, then:
a. The good is excludable
b. The good is rival in consumption
5. Excludable: Referring to a good, describes the case in which the supplier can prevent
those who do not pay from consuming the good
6. Rival in Consumption: Referring to a good, describes the case in which one unit
cannot be consumed by more than one person at the same time
7. Private Good: When a good is both excludable and rival in consumption
a. Markets cannot supply goods and services efficiently unless they’re private
goods
b. Example: Wheat is a private good, because:
i. It’s excludable: A farmer can sell a bushel of wheat to one consumer
without having to provide wheat to everyone in the country
ii. It’s rival in consumption: If I eat bread baked with the farmer’s wheat, then
the wheat cannot be consumed by someone else
8. Nonexcludable: Referring to a good, describes the case in which the supplier cannot
prevent those who do not pay from consuming the good
a. Suffer from inefficiently low production in a market economy
b. Example: Fire protection
9. Nonrival in Consumption: Referring to a good, describes the case in which the same
unit can be consumed by more than one person at the same time
a. Suffer from inefficiently low consumption in a market economy
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