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Public Goods

Public goods are not provided by the free market and government intervention is needed to change this missing market.

Characteristics of public goods

Characteristics of public goods

  • Non-rivalry: if one person consumes a good this doesn't stop another person from consuming it.
    • E.g one person gaining benefit from a street lamp doesn't stop another person from gaining benefit from it.
  • Non-excludable: someone not paying for a good doesn't affect their ability to consume it.
    • E.g not paying for a streetlamp doesn't mean you can't see when you walk down a street at night.
Public vs private goods

Public vs private goods

  • Private goods exhibit both excludability and rivalry.
    • E.g a phone is a private good.
    • If I purchase a particular phone, that means someone else cannot have that phone (rivalry).
    • If I do not pay for the phone, I cannot have the benefits of the phone (excludable).
Quasi-public goods

Quasi-public goods

  • A public good can start to have private characteristics and become quasi-public.
    • E.g putting a tollbooth on a road makes it excludable, and so a quasi-public good.
Public goods and market failure

Public goods and market failure

  • The private sector rarely provides true public goods (as there is little financial incentive to).
  • The government must intervene and decide the suitable quantity of public goods for society. To do so, the government has to guess the marginal social benefit (which may be inaccurate).

The Free-Rider Problem

The reason public goods are not provided by the free market is because of the free-rider problem.

The free-rider problem

The free-rider problem

  • It is impossible to exclude the benefits of a public good from someone.
  • As a result, people that don't pay for the product will receive the same benefit as those that do.
  • This disincentivises people from producing a good in the free market because of the free riders who receive the benefit without paying.
  • This is a market failure.
Pricing public goods

Pricing public goods

  • It is hard to price a public good.
  • Producers may overvalue the product and consumers undervalue.
  • This further discourages the production of public goods in the free market.
Jump to other topics
1

Introduction to Markets

2

Market Failure

3

The UK Macroeconomy

4

The UK Economy - Policies

5

Business Behaviour

6

Market Structures

7

A Global Perspective

8

Finance & Inequality

9

Examples of Global Policy

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