ECONOM 1014 Chapter Notes - Chapter 19: Qqq, Overfishing, Common Fisheries Policy

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When a person can cheaply be prevented from using a good, economists say the good is excludable: ex. When people who don"t pay cannot easily be prevented from using the good, the good is non-excludable: ex. When one person"s use of a good reduces the ability of another person to use the same good, economists say the good is rival: ex. When one person"s use of a good does not reduce the ability of another person to use the same good, economists say the good is non-rival: ex. Using these 4 factors, a good can be broken down into one of 4 types as seen in the chart below: Private goods: goods that are excludable and rival. They can be efficiently provided in competitive markets. Because they are excludable, there is a strong incentive to pay for and produce them. Because they are rival, excludability does not lead to inefficiency.

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