ECON 160 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Ice Cream Cone, Civil Defense Siren, Excludability

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Chapter 11: public goods and common resources: the different kinds of goods. Excludability: the property of a good whereby a person can be prevented from using it. Rival in consumption: the property of a good whereby one person"s use diminishes other people"s use: private goods: are both excludable and rival in consumption. Ex: ice cream cone: public goods: are neither excludable nor rival in consumption. Ex: tornado siren: common resources: are rival in consumption but not excludable. Ex: fishing for fish: club goods: are excludable but not rival in consumption. Because of these external effects, private decisions about consumption and production can lead to an inefficient allocation of resources, and government intervention can potentially raise economic well-being. Free rider: a person who receives the benefit of a good but avoids paying for it. Because public goods are not excludable, the free-rider problem prevents the private market from supplying them. The government, however, can potentially remedy the problem.

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