Public good

good that is non-excludable and non-rival

In Economics, a public good is a kind of common good. Public goods have two main properties:

  • It is not possible to prevent someone from consuming the good.
  • If a person consumes the good, this does not reduce the availabililty of the good to others.
A fireworks display is a public good because it is non-excludable (impossible to prevent people from using it) and non-rivalrous (one individual's use does not reduce availability to others).[1]

Examples for public goods are fresh air, knowledge, street lighting, or a fireworks display.

Public goods are an example of market failure: If all actors maximize their gain, this does not produce an efficient solution.

It is obvious that because the goods are non-excludable, it means that a producer sees no benefit in producing or providing the good on the market, this is because it is impossible to make a profit from it as people who have not paid for the good. For this reason, the government may intervene to provide it. There are relatively few examples of purely public goods, however some examples are:

  • Flood Control
  • Public water supplies
  • Street lighting
  • Lighthouse protection
  • National Defence Services
  • Parks and other public recreational areas

The reason that the government feels the need to provide these goods is because the Marginal Social Benefit is greater than the Marginal Private Benefit, and so because there are positive externalities in consumption, it will always be under consumed in the market mechanism.

References

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  1. Cowen, Tyler (December 2007). David R. Henderson (ed.). The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics. The Library of Economics and Liberty. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
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