ECON 1B03 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Private Good, Overfishing, Natural Monopoly

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ECON 1B03 Full Course Notes
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ECON 1B03 Full Course Notes
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208 chapter 11/public goods and common resources. Public goods are goods that are neither excludable nor rival. Examples include a tornado siren, national defence,, and uncongested nontoll roads. Common resources are goods that are rival but not excludable. Examples include fish in the ocean, the environment, and congested nontoll roads. The free-rider problem occurs when people receive the benefits of a good but avoid paying for it. The free-rider problem induces the government to provide public goods because if the government uses tax revenue to provide the good, everyone pays for it and everyone enjoys its benefits. The government should decide whether to provide a public good by comparing the good"s costs to its benefits; if the benefits exceed the costs, society is better off. Governments try to limit the use of common resources because one person"s use of the resource diminishes others" use of it, so there is a negative externality which leads people to use common resources excessively.

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