1 / 12

Public Goods

Public Goods. Normative and Positive Perspective. Plan. Review: The First Welfare Theorem Public Goods definitions, examples practical problems with providing public goods. The First Welfare Theorem . If producers and consumers act as price takers; there is a market for every commodity;

makani
Download Presentation

Public Goods

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public Goods Normative and Positive Perspective

  2. Plan • Review: The First Welfare Theorem • Public Goods • definitions, examples • practical problems with providing public goods

  3. The First Welfare Theorem • If • producers and consumers act as price takers; • there is a market for every commodity; • all the commodities are rival and excludable; • consumers’ preferences and technology are “well-behaved” • Then a market allocation is Pareto Efficient.

  4. Public Goods • Public goods are • non-rival (use of a unit by one agent does not preclude its use by the other agents); • non-excludable (it is impossible to prevent anyone in a community from enjoying it) • Examples • defense, software (“know-how”), lighthouse, radio, clean air, parks, highways

  5. Impure Public Goods • Some goods can be viewed non-rival as long as few are using them. Congestion may reduce the benefits to the users as their number grow large. • Examples: parks, highways, swimming pools. • Some goods can be restricted for use only by the members of a certain community. • Examples: swimming pools, software. • Remark: Honesty is NOT a public good.

  6. Public Goods and a Government • There are privately produced public goods: sanitation, fire protection, police • There are publicly produced private goods: housing, medical care • Thus, provision of public goods is not the one and only prerogative of a government

  7. The “Free rider” Problem • An Example • Adam and Eve can make a firework if they contribute $10 to buy it from a store. If the money collected is more than the cost, than the surplus will be divided equally between Adam and Eve. • Adam and Eve have to announce how much are they willing to pay for the firework. • Adam values fireworks at 7 and Eve values it at 4. Each one knows his own valuation and does not know the valuation of the other.

  8. Revelation of Preferences

  9. The Outcome • Whatever Eve says, it is better for Adam to underestimate his willingness to pay. • Whatever Adam says, it is beneficial for Eve to underestimate as well. • As a result, there will be no fireworks, although together they are willing to cover its cost.

  10. How to make them tell the truth? • Suppose now that the rules of the game are different. • Both Adam and Eve still have to announce their valuations. The fireworks will be provided as long as the sum of their valuations is above the cost • But each one pays the cost of the fireworks, $10, minus the announced valuation of the opposite player.

  11. The Revelation Game

  12. The Outcome • Adam and Eve enjoy the fireworks • But the “budget” is not balanced, i.e., somebody has to pay (subsidize) the provision of the public good.

More Related