ECON 1000 Study Guide - Final Guide: W. M. Keck Observatory, Private Good, Fish Farming

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18 Apr 2016
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ECON 1000 Full Course Notes
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Chapter 17: public goods and common resources objectives: Distinguish among private goods, public goods, and common resources. Understand how the free-rider problem arises and how the quantity of public goods is determined. These and all goods and services can be classified according to whether they are excludable or non- excludable and rival or non-rival. A good is excludable if only the people who pay for it are able to enjoy its benefits. A good is non-excludable if it is impossible (or extremely costly) to prevent anyone from benefiting from it. A good is rival if one person"s use of it decreases the quantity available for someone else. A good is non-rival if one person"s use of it does not decrease the quantity available for someone else. A private good is both rival and excludable. A public good is both non-rival and non-rival and non-excludable.

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