Cards (71)

  • Private goods exhibit three key characteristics: rivalry, excludability, and rejectability
  • Rejectability in private goods indicates that consumers can choose not to consume the good.

    True
  • Public goods are characterized by being non-rivalrous and non-excludable
  • Non-excludability in public goods means it is impossible or costly to prevent anyone from consuming the good.
  • Match the type of good with its characteristics:
    Private Goods ↔️ Rivalrous, Excludable, Rejectable
    Public Goods ↔️ Non-Rivalrous, Non-Excludable
    Quasi-Public Goods ↔️ Partially Rivalrous, Partially Excludable
  • What are examples of quasi-public goods?
    Education, healthcare, public transportation
  • What does rivalry in private goods mean?
    One person's consumption prevents others
  • Rejectability in private goods allows consumers to choose not to consume the good.

    True
  • Excludability refers to the ability of suppliers to prevent those who do not pay from consuming the good
  • Private goods exhibit three key characteristics: rivalry, excludability, and rejectability
  • What are three examples of public goods?
    National defense, street lighting, clean air
  • What are three examples of quasi-public goods?
    Education, healthcare, public transportation
  • Steps in the market mechanism for private goods
    1️⃣ Supply and demand interact
    2️⃣ Equilibrium price and quantity are determined
    3️⃣ Private goods are allocated efficiently
  • Rivalry in private goods means one person's consumption prevents another from consuming the same unit
  • What is the market mechanism for private goods based on?
    Supply and demand
  • Excludability in private goods allows suppliers to prevent non-payers from consuming the good.

    True
  • Rivalry in private goods means that one person's consumption prevents another from consuming the same unit of the good.
    True
  • Excludability in private goods refers to the ability of suppliers to prevent those who do not pay from consuming the good.
  • What are examples of private goods?
    Food, clothing, cinema tickets
  • Non-rivalrous consumption means that one person's consumption does not prevent others from consuming the same good.

    True
  • What are examples of public goods?
    National defense, street lighting, clean air
  • Quasi-public goods are partially rivalrous and partially excludable.

    True
  • Private goods exhibit three key characteristics: rivalry, excludability, and rejectability
  • Excludability in private goods refers to the ability of suppliers to prevent those who do not pay from consuming the good.
  • What does rivalry mean in the context of private goods?
    One's consumption prevents others
  • What does rejectability indicate about a good?
    Consumers can choose not to consume
  • Public goods are non-rivalrous and non-excludable
    True
  • Quasi-public goods are partially rivalrous and partially excludable
  • Match the characteristic with the correct type of good:
    Rivalrous ↔️ Private goods
    Non-excludable ↔️ Public goods
    Partially rivalrous ↔️ Quasi-public goods
  • The equilibrium price and quantity are found where the supply curve intersects the demand curve
    True
  • What are two examples of goods that are non-rivalrous and non-excludable?
    Public goods
  • One person's consumption of a private good prevents another from consuming the same unit
  • How does the market ensure private goods are efficiently allocated?
    Through the price system
  • What type of rivalry characterizes public goods?
    Non-rivalrous
  • The free market provides public goods efficiently due to their non-rivalrous and non-excludable nature.
    False
  • Why is the supply of public goods often insufficient in the free market?
    Lack of profitability
  • Market failure occurs for public goods due to a lack of profitability
  • Rivalry in private goods means one person's consumption reduces availability for others.

    True
  • What is an example of a public good?
    National defense
  • Non-rivalrous consumption means one person's use of a public good does not diminish its availability for others.

    True