MF - Public Goods - XI 2025
MF - Public Goods - XI 2025
MF - Public Goods - XI 2025
• Non-excludable
• Once the good is provided, producers cannot exclude anyone from
enjoying and benefiting from the good, even if they have not paid. For
example, once asteroid protection technology is implemented, everyone
on earth benefits regardless if they have paid for such service.
Case study
Consider the case of a public beach. The beach is
open to everyone free of charge, but the beach has a
maximum capacity of 600 people.
Private Public
goods goods
1 2 3 4 5
In a free-market economy, if producers cannot charge for streetlighting due to its
non-excludable nature, what possible implications might there be?
Free-rider problem
• The non-excludability characteristic of public goods prevents profit-
maximising firms from providing such goods as they cannot charge
consumers. This is known as the free rider problem where the public can
enjoy the benefits of a good without paying for it.
Government
• Disadvantages
• Government loses a degree of control over public goods.
• Cost of contracting may be greater than direct provision.
• Heavily dependent on the quality of work done by the contracted firm.
• Additional monitoring costs.
Evaluating government intervention
• Direct provision and contracting out aim to address the issue of the free
rider problem where public goods are under provided. Government
intervention is required to correct this market failure.
• However, any form of intervention may lead to another set of issues. For
example, the government needs to estimate the level of resources they
should allocate towards different public goods. This involves normative
value judgments based on politicians and policy makers.
Real world example
• Article: Hong Kong Population Census
• Evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of the Hong Kong government’s
direct provision of the population census.
Over to you…
• Hoang, Wray, & Chakraborty (2020)
• Economics for the IB Diploma Programme
• Page 170
• Paper 1 Exam Practice Question 12.2
• [10 marks]
• Paper 2 and 3 Exam Practice Question 12.3
• [4 marks]
Test your knowledge on this unit: Kahoot!