ECON 25100 Lecture Notes - Lecture 15: Economic Equilibrium, Overfishing

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Non excludable: impossible(costly) to prevent someone from enjoying the benefits of a. Public goods are an example of non excludable goods. service or resource. Excludable: it is possible to prevent someone from enjoying the benefit of a good, Non-rival: use by one person does not reduce the quantity available for anyone else. Public goods are an example of non-rival goods. Rival: use by one person reduces the quantity available for anyone else. When a public good is overused, it becomes a rival and thus becomes a common resource. Free-rider problem: nobody has an incentive to pay for a public good. Marginal social benefit is the sum of the individual benefits. Therefore, demand for public good is determined by the vertical summation of demand. Eg: congested highway, overfished waters, vandalized public parks. Marginal cost= change in total cost quantity. Marginal commute time= average commute time + additional team imposed on other cars.

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