EC120 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Market Failure, Externality, Private Good

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16 Feb 2017
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EC120 Full Course Notes
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Excludability: the property of a good whereby a person can be prevented from using it. Ri(cid:448)al i(cid:374) (cid:272)o(cid:374)su(cid:373)ptio(cid:374): property of a good (cid:449)here(cid:271)y o(cid:374)e perso(cid:374)"s use di(cid:373)i(cid:374)ishes other people"s use. Private goods: goods that are both excludable and rival: example ice-cream cone: once someone benefits from it, no one else can. Public goods: goods that are neither excludable nor rival: example national defence: when one person benefits from national defence, he/she does not reduce the benefit to anyone else. Common resources: goods that are rival but not excludable: example fish in the ocean: one person catching a fish only reduces amount of fish left for other fishermen. Club goods: goods that are excludable but not rival: example fire protection: easy for people to be excluded from using the good. Free rider: 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.

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