Microeconomics

Public Goods

Non-excludable, non-rival — markets underprovide because of free riders

Public goods have two key properties: (1) Non-excludable — can't prevent non-payers from using. (2) Non-rival — one person's use doesn't reduce availability for others. Examples: national defense, clean air, lighthouses, public radio, fundamental research. Markets fail to provide adequate amount because of free-rider problem — incentive to use without paying. Solutions: government provision (taxes), assurance contracts (Kickstarter-style), club goods, charity. Different from: private goods (excludable, rival), common-pool resources (rival, non-excludable), club goods (non-rival, excludable).

  • Two key propertiesNon-excludable, non-rival
  • Free rider problemIncentive to use without paying
  • Market failureMarkets underprovide
  • ExamplesNational defense, clean air, lighthouses, basic research
  • SolutionsGovernment provision, assurance contracts, club goods
  • FoundationSamuelson 1954, mathematical analysis

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Why public goods matter

  • Government role. Why government exists.
  • Public economics. Foundation.
  • Environmental policy. Clean air, climate.
  • Research funding. Why governments fund.
  • Tax policy. Justifying taxation.
  • Crowdfunding. Modern alternative mechanisms.
  • Education. Foundational economics.

Common misconceptions

  • Just government goods. Definition based on properties.
  • Always under-provided. Some private provision works.
  • Pure public goods common. Most are mixed.
  • Same as common-pool. Different (rival vs non-rival).
  • Government always best provider. Trade-offs in different mechanisms.
  • Solves all market failures. Specific to non-excludable, non-rival.

Frequently asked questions

What's a public good?

Two properties. (1) Non-excludable: can't prevent non-payers from using. National defense protects all citizens; can't exclude tax avoiders. (2) Non-rival: one person's use doesn't reduce availability. Lighthouse benefits all ships passing. Both: must hold. Different from: private goods (excludable, rival — like food), club goods (non-rival but excludable — Netflix), common-pool (rival, non-excludable — fish).

Why do markets fail?

Free rider problem. People can use without paying. So: rational to wait for others to pay. Everyone reasons same way. Result: under-provision. Markets work when can charge and exclude. Public goods: neither. Even if value greater than cost, voluntary funding often inadequate. Government often steps in.

What about national defense?

Classic public good. Military protects all citizens (non-excludable). Protecting one doesn't reduce protection for another (non-rival). If voluntary funding: free-rider problem; under-provision. Solution: tax-funded; government provides. Most countries: national defense as government function. Demonstrates: some essential goods need collective action.

What about basic research?

Public good qualities. Scientific knowledge: non-excludable (once published, anyone can use). Non-rival (many can apply same insight). Markets underfund: hard to capture full value. Solutions: government funding (NSF, NIH), university research, foundations. Patent system: makes some research excludable (creates monopoly to fund) but trade-off with deadweight loss.

What's an assurance contract?

Funding mechanism. Promises: I'll contribute if enough others do. Threshold reached: all contribute. Below threshold: nothing happens. Solves free-rider partly. Modern: Kickstarter, crowdfunding. Limited applicability: works for some public goods, not all (national defense too big). Useful: smaller-scale public goods.

What about club goods?

Non-rival but excludable. Examples: Netflix subscriptions, private parks, gated communities. One can use without reducing others' use; but excluded if not paying. Markets can provide: charge subscribers; cover costs. Different from public goods (truly non-excludable). Many "public" services are actually club goods.

How are public goods funded?

Government provision: most common. Tax revenue; provided to all. Examples: roads, police, fire, schools, parks. Sometimes: government funds private provision (charter schools, defense contractors). Voluntary: charity, foundations, crowdfunding. Public-private partnerships. Each method: trade-offs in efficiency, fairness, accountability.