ECON 160 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Excludability, Private Good, Market Failure

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Economics chapter 11: public goods and common resources. Goods are defined by two characteristics: excludability and rivalry in consumption. Excludability: the property of a good whereby a person can be prevented from using it. Excludable goods tend to be because people have to pay for the good, but there are other ways to exclude people, such as walls and doors. Rivalry: the property of a good whereby one person"s use diminishes other people"s use. Wearing a sweatshirt means that another person cannot wear that same sweatshirt. Because private and club goods are excludable, they can be controlled by the market. Price is the main way that goods are excludable, and price is the way that consumers and producers communicate. However, common resources and public goods are non-excludable, so they cannot be allocated by the market. This is the second market failure, after externalities, that the government can sometimes improve. The main problem of public goods is the free rider problem.

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