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club good: an intermediate case between a pure public good and a pure private
good. With a club good exclusion is feasible, but the optimal size of the club is
generally larger than one person. An example is a film shown in a theater, where
it is possible for the good to be priced (exclusion can be practiced) and for a number
of people to share the good without diminishing each other's consumption of
it. The optimal size of a club is that which maximizes the group's joint utility.
economies of scale: when increased output lowers a product's average cost.
economies of scope: when producing two products together is cheaper than producing
them separately.
externality: when an individual, firm, country, or other entity takes an action but
does not bear all its costs (negative externalities) or receive all its benefits (positive
externalities).
final public good: like private goods, public goods can be differentiated by the
stages of their production process. Final public goods are those desired for consumption,
such as clean air, efficient markets, and peace and security. Producing
final public goods often requires inputs of many private goods, public goods, or
both. Public goods that contribute to the production of a final public good are
called intermediate public goods. For example, achieving clean air or a stable climate
requires international agreements (such as the Kyoto Protocol) and national
regimes (such as for sustainable energy or forest management). Sometimes a public
good can be final from one perspective and intermediate from another.
Consider knowledge. People desire some elements of knowledge for their own
sake. Other elements (such as medical knowledge) may be used in the production
of vaccines (which are private goods), with the goal of producing a final public
goodsay, disease control or,more generally, enhanced healthy living conditions.
free rider: someone who enjoys the benefits of a good without paying for it.
Because it is difficult to keep people from using pure public goods, those who benefit
from them have an incentive to avoid paying for them.
global public good: a public good with benefits that are strongly universal in
terms of countries (covering more than one group of countries), people (accruing
to several, preferably all, population groups), and generations (extending to
both current and future generations, or at least meeting the needs of current generations
without foreclosing development options for future generations).
intermediate public good: see final public good.
market failure: when a market fails to achieve economic efficiency.
moral hazard: the tendency for people who purchase or are provided with insurance
to be less cautious because they have less reason to avoid what they are
insured against.
nonexcludable: describes benefits that are available to all people once a good is
provided. By contrast, a good's benefits are excludable if they can be withheld by
the owner or provider. Firework displays, pollution control devices, and street
lighting yield nonexcludable benefits because once they are provided, it is difficult
if not impossible to exclude people from enjoying their benefits.
nonrival: when a good can be consumed by one person without detracting from
the consumption opportunities available to others. Sunsets are nonrival (or indivisible)
when views are unobstructed.
Pareto efficient: when no rearrangement of a resource allocation can make anyone
better off without making someone else worse off.
prisoner's dilemma: when the independent pursuit of self-interest by two parties
makes both worse off.
provision of public goods: typically consists of two separate but intertwined
processes. The first is the political process, which involves making decisions about
which public goods to produce, how much of them to produce, how to shape
them, and at what net cost and benefit to whom. The second is the production
process, which involves bringing together contributions from all concerned actor
groups, sectors, and countries. Financing issues should be considered in both parts
of the provision process because they may critically influence actors' incentives to
cooperate.
public good: goods with nonrival consumption and nonexcludable benefits have
a strong potential for publicness. For example, it generally costs little or nothing
to give an additional person access to statistical data.Yet only some data are in the
public domainavailable for all people to use free of charge. Other data are private
and must be purchased. Thus it is important to distinguish between a good's
potential and de facto publicness. Only de facto public goods are actually available
for all people to consume.
transaction costs: the extra costs (beyond the price of the purchase) of conducting
a transaction, whether in terms of money, time, or inconvenience.
Definitions are adapted from Joseph E. Stiglitz's Economics, second edition (New York: W. W.
Norton, 1997); from The MIT Dictionary of Modern Economics, fourth edition (Cambridge, Mass.:
MIT Press, 1992); and from Richard Cornes and Todd Sandler's The Theory of Externalities, Public
Goods and Club Goods, second edition (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996). The definition
of public good reflects the ideas presented in Kaul and Mendoza (in this volume).
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