ECON 1010 Chapter Notes - Chapter 17: Deadweight Loss, Rational Ignorance, Natural Monopoly

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Excludable: a good is considered excludable if it is possible to prevent someone from enjoying its beneits. Non-excludable: a good is considered non-excludable if it is impossible (or extremely costly) to prevent anyone from beneiing from it. Rival: a good is considered rival if one person"s use of it decreases the quanity available for someone else or if only one person is available to use it at once. Non-rival: a good is considered non-rival if one person"s use of it does not decrease the quanity available for someone else or if muliple people are using it will not mater. These four characterisics are used to classify and categorize goods/services/resources. Private goods: a private is both rival and excludable. A can of coke and a ish on coke aquacultures farms are examples of private goods. Most goods in a store are considered private goods. Public goods: a public good is both non-rival and non-excludable.

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