ECON1101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Pay Television, Aggregate Demand, Private Good

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Private goods are rivalrous and excludable: a good is rivalrous if its consumptions prevents someone else from consuming it, a good is excludable if you can exclude someone else from consuming it. Goods that are perfectly non-rivalrous and non-excludable are called pure public goods. Goods that are non-rivalrous and non-excludable up to a point are called impure public goods: some goods are non-rivalrous but are excludable a typical example is pay. Tv where unless you a subscription, you can be excluded. However, it is not rivalrous (cid:271)e(cid:272)ause you(cid:396) (cid:272)o(cid:374)su(cid:373)ptio(cid:374) does(cid:374)"t stop so(cid:373)eo(cid:374)e else f(cid:396)o(cid:373) consuming it: some goods are non-excludable but are rivalrous. An example is a motorway where anyone can access it (assuming there are no tolls) but as you consume it, you stop others from doing the same (congestion). Typically, most public goods are only pure up to a point (very rare for a good to be perfectly public). Aggregating individual demands : marginal social benefit and efficiency:

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