Title: Public Goods
1Public Goods
- Topic Nine
- Chapter Ten, Eleven, Twelve
2Normal Goods
Marginal Cost
Average Cost
Pm
Qm
3Pure Public Goods
Average Cost
Marginal Cost
Qm
4Pure Public Goods
- The marginal cost of producing the second unit of
output is zero - Other characteristics
- Consumption rivalry
- Non-excludability
- Supply-side externality
- Cannot assign property rights
- Cannot defend property rights
- National defense
5Non-excludability
- Free rider problem
- High cost of determining relative preferences
- Perfect knowledge of preferences
- Leads to inefficient output
6Quasi-Public Goods
Average Cost
Marginal Cost
Qm
7Quasi-Public Goods
- The marginal cost of producing the second unit is
positive, but not high - Other characteristics
- Consumption rivalry
- Excludability
- Can assign property rights
- Can defend property rights
- Satellite network
8Privately Produced Goods - supply side
Marginal Cost
Average Cost
Pm
Qm
9Privately Produced Goods
- Fixed costs of capital are averaged into the
production process - Capital is discrete
- Labor is continuous
- Double or triple shifts on same piece of capital
- Increasing returns to fixed capital
- Decreasing marginal cost curve
- The cost of each additional unit of output
decreases - Capacity constraint
- At some point decreasing returns to fixed capital
- Increasing marginal cost curve
- The cost of each additional unit of output
increases
10Pure Public Goods - supply side
Average Cost
Qm
Marginal Cost
11Pure Public Goods
- The marginal cost of producing the first unit is
equal to the total cost - The marginal cost of producing the second and
subsequent units of output is zero - No decreasing or increasing returns to scale
- There is no economic determination of optimal
output
12Characteristics of Pure Public Goods
- Non-rival consumption
- utility of consumption unaffected by others
consumption - Non-excludability
- Cost of excluding others consumption is infinite
- Leads to inefficient or no market output
- Very few goods qualify as pure public goods
13Property Rights (a function of excludability)
- Cannot assign property rights
- All of none have property rights to pure public
goods - Can defend property rights collectively, but not
individually - Pure public goods can be produced privately or
publicly
14Free-rider problem (Policing)?
- Imperfect knowledge of preferences
- Preferences can only be inferred
- High levels wealth may have different preferences
with respect to crime\ - Revealed preferences through political choices
- High wealth more conservative, preserve what they
have - Low levels of wealth prefer police emphasis on
injury - High cost of determining relative preferences?
- Local taxes based on wealth (property taxes)
- Match wealth and protection (police, fire, etc.)
- Not a free-rider problem
15Free-rider Problem National Defense
- Canada depends on the U.S. defense?
- During the cold war
- Did Canada pay its fair share
- Europe depends on the U.S. defense
- War on Terrorism
- Does Europe pay its fair share
- Is the U.S. defense machine a public good?
16Quality of Life a Public Good?
- Some measures of Quality of Life
- Educational opportunities
- Environmental attitudes
- Amount and seriousness of crime
- Relative freedom
- Does everyone get the same level of Quality of
Life - Immigration is a measure of its public goodness
17Radio TV as Public Goods?
- Radio waves are a public good (Quasi??)
- Non-rival
- Certainly this is true
- Non-excludable
- Radio waves can be jammed
- Publicly or Privately provided
- Public funded by government
- Private funded by access to airwaves in the form
of commercials - Radio band is controlled by the government
18Radio TV as Private Goods?
- Satellite and cable broadcasts
- Non-rival
- But not non-exclusive
- Consumers can and are excluded
- Technology changed things
- The public-good quality of the airwaves no longer
are
19Quasi-Public Goods supply side
Average Cost
Marginal Cost
Qm
20Quasi-Public Goods
- The marginal cost of producing the second and
subsequent units is positive, but not high - This may apply to Radio TV
- Other characteristics
- Non-rival consumption
- This assumption may be relaxed
- High numbers of consumers may reduce its
consumption - Public parks
- Non-excludability from consumption
- For example concerts
- Can assign defend property rights
21Vinyl Records Movies as a Private Goods
- Consumption is non-rival
- Exclusion
- Must buy the record
- Property rights assignable by buying record
- Property rights defensible
- Must buy a ticket to the theater
- Property rights assignable by ticket
- Property rights defensible
22CDs and DVDs as Public Goods
- Consumption is non-rival
- Exclusion
- Theaters still can exclude easily
- High cost to defense against pirating
- Internet access to CDs and DVDs is relatively easy
23Internet
- Private good?
- Non-rival
- High traffic on internet affects consumption
- Non-exclusionary
- Must have a gateway, relative high access cost
- Public good?
- Once one has access much of the internet is free
- Other parts have costs associated
24Public Good or Private Good
- Police
- Protection?
- Private security firms
- Investigation?
- Private eyes
- Fire
- Parks
25Government a Public Good
- Supplies the infrastructure for the maintenance
and defense of private goods - Federal
- National defense, education, courts,
constitutional protections - Goods and services demanded by their constituency
- Healthcare, roads, bridges, national parks
- Provincial
- Education, courts
- Goods and services demand by their constituency
- Healthcare, roads, bridges, provincial parks
- Local
- Education, road clearing and maintenance
26Governments Change
- Governments continually change property rights
- Creating new rights obligations
- Laws
- Regulations
- Statutes
- Zoning
- Taxes
- Treaties
- International negotiations
- Etc.