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Lecture Notes - Chapter 16

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These lecture notes from Chapter 16 of Microeconomics: Canada in the Global Environment (11th Edition) examine the economic challenges associated with public goods and common resources. The notes distinguish between private goods, public goods, common resources, and club goods based on rivalry and excludability. They explain how the **free-rider problem** leads to underproduction of public goods and how the **tragedy of the commons** results in overuse of shared resources. Graphs illustrate inefficiencies and policy solutions, including government provision, Pigovian taxes, quotas, and assigning property rights. Real-world examples and community-based strategies highlight how efficiency and sustainability can be achieved.

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April 4, 2025
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Lecture Notes: Chapter 16 – Public Goods and Common Resources
Based on Microeconomics: Canada in the Global Environment (11th Edition)



Introduction

Markets work well for many goods and services where consumers pay for what they use and
producers earn revenue from what they sell. But some goods defy the typical rules of supply and
demand. Public goods and common resources present unique challenges that lead to market
failure. In this chapter, we distinguish between different types of goods, explore the free-rider
problem associated with public goods, and analyze the tragedy of the commons related to
common resources. Understanding these challenges helps explain why government intervention
or collective solutions are often necessary to achieve efficiency.



1. Classification of Goods

Goods and resources can be classified along two dimensions:

 Rivalry in consumption: Does one person’s use reduce availability for others?
 Excludability: Can people be prevented from using it?

Four Types of Goods:

Excludable Non-Excludable
Rival Private Goods Common Resources
Non-Rival Club Goods Public Goods


1.1 Private Goods

 Excludable and Rival
 People pay to use them; one person’s use prevents others from using the same unit.

Examples:

 Food
 Clothing
 Cars

Markets efficiently allocate private goods.

, 1.2 Public Goods

 Non-Excludable and Non-Rival
 Cannot prevent non-payers from using them, and one person’s use doesn’t reduce
availability.

Examples:

 National defense
 Public fireworks displays
 Clean air (in some contexts)

Markets underprovide public goods due to the free-rider problem.



1.3 Common Resources

 Non-Excludable but Rival
 Everyone can use them, but use by one person reduces availability for others.

Examples:

 Fisheries
 Public pastures
 Forests

Markets tend to overuse common resources, leading to the tragedy of the commons.



1.4 Club Goods

 Excludable but Non-Rival
 People can be excluded, but one person’s use doesn’t reduce others’ use—at least up to a
point.

Examples:

 Netflix subscriptions
 Private parks or sports clubs



2. The Free-Rider Problem and Public Goods
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