ECON 1050 Chapter Notes - Chapter 17-18: Bilateral Monopoly, Monopsony, Trade Union

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Excludable a good is excludable if it is possible to prevent someone from enjoying its benefits. A good is non-excludable if it is important to prevent anyone from benefiting from it. Rival a good is rival is if one person"s use of it decreases the quantity available for someone else. Non-arrival a good is non-rival if one person"s use of it does not decrease the quantity available for someone else. Public goods both nonrival and nonexcludable. Natural monopoly good non rival and excludable. The free rider problem: market would provide an inefficiently small quantity of a public good. A free rider enjoys the benefits of a good or service without paying for it. Principle of minimum differentiation: this principle describes the behavior of political parties. The tendency for a competitor to make themselves similar to appeal to the maximum number of clients or voters. If competition between two political parties is to deliver the efficient quantity of a public good,

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