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Classification Table for Types of GoodsA good is excludable if people (ordinarily, people who have not paid for it) can be prevented from using it. It is rival, or subtractable if one person's consumption of a good necessarily diminishes another person's consumption of it. | Excludable: | | Yes | No | Subtractable: Yes | Private Goods | Common-Pool Resources | No | Club Goods | Public Goods | What each category means - Private Goods: An economic good, or a tangible item that can be purchased and traded within a market. Private goods are excludable. They are also rival, or subtractable. You can't eat a hamburger that is being eaten by someone else.
For example: Most goods that are commonly traded, from hamburgers to furniture to 747 airplanes. - Club Goods: Goods that are excludable but non-rival, or non-subtractable. This means that while certain people can be excluded from the consumption of a good, one person's consumption of it does not diminish another person's.
For example: Community services, including those provided by religious organizations; cable television; computer software. - Common-Pool Resources
For example: Fisheries, forests, oil fields, groundwater basins, and so on. - Public Goods
For example: National defense, public parks, street lighting, lighthouses, and so on. These categories are not always immediately clear. Consider, for example, a road. If it's a toll road, it is excludable, since only those who pay the toll can travel by it. Therefore a congested toll road is a private good, since it is both excludable and subtractable, or rival, in consumption -- every additional car on the road reduces the space available to others (and increases their level of aggravation). An uncongested toll road, on the other hand, is excludable but non-subtractable, making it a club good. What about regular non-toll roads? Well, if it's a busy road at rush hour, it's non-excludable but certainly subtractable, making it a common-pool resource. However, if it's a lonely rural highway, or even a city street late at night, it's neither excludable nor subtractable -- the presence of another car on an uncongested road does not diminish the space left for other drivers. |
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