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Boundless Economics
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Chapter 8

Market Failure: Public Goods and Common Resources

Book Version 3
By Boundless
Boundless Economics
Economics
by Boundless
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Section 1
Public Goods
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Defining a Good

There are four types of goods in economics, which are defined based on excludability and rivalrousness in consumption.

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Private Goods

A private good is both excludable and rivalrous.

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Public Goods

Individuals cannot be excluded from using a public good, and one individual's use of it does not limit its availability to others.

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Optimal Quantity of a Public Good

The government is providing an efficient quantity of a public good when its marginal benefit equals its marginal cost.

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Demand for Public Goods

The aggregate demand curve for a public good is the vertical summation of individual demand curves.

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Cost-Benefit Analysis

The government uses cost-benefit analysis to decide whether to provide a public good.

Section 2
Common Resources
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The Tragedy of the Commons

The tragedy of the commons is the overexploitation of a common good by individual, rational actors.

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The Free-Rider Problem

The free-rider problem is when individuals benefit from a public good without paying their share of the cost.

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Market Failure: Externalities
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Market Failure: Public Goods and Common Resources
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