Economics 1021A/B Chapter Notes - Chapter 17: Private Good, Deadweight Loss, Social Cost

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ECON 1021A/B Full Course Notes
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ECON 1021A/B Full Course Notes
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A good is excludable if it"s possible to prevent someone from enjoying its benefits (people must pay to consume them) A good is nonexcludable if it"s 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 nonrival if one person"s use of it doesn"t decrease the quantity available for someone else. Free rider enjoys the benefits of a good or service without paying for it. Since no one can be excluded from the benefits of a public good, it creates a free-rider problem the market would provide an inefficiently small quantity of a public good. Msb > msc, creates a deadweight loss. The government can tax all consumers of the public good and force everyone to pay for its provision, so public provision overcomes the free-rider problem.

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