ποΈ Why Government Provides Public Goods
Since the market fails to provide public goods due to the free-rider problem, the government must step in. It funds provision through taxation β everyone pays, so no one can free-ride.
How does government decide how much to provide?
- Costβbenefit analysis (CBA) β government estimates the social benefits and social costs to decide if the project is worthwhile.
- There is no market price signal to guide allocation, so the government must estimate willingness to pay β this is imprecise.
- Political factors also influence decisions (e.g. defence spending reflects geopolitical priorities).
Government provision doesn't mean government production. The state might contract private firms to build a road or run a defence system, but it funds the provision through taxes.
π Quasi-Public Goods
Definition: Quasi-public goods.
Examples
- Roads β generally non-rivalrous (at low traffic), but toll technology can make them excludable. They become rivalrous during congestion.
- Parks β open access (non-excludable), but become rivalrous when overcrowded.
- Wi-Fi / internet β password protection makes it excludable; bandwidth congestion makes it rivalrous.
In essays, show the examiner you understand that the boundary between public and private goods is blurred. Technology (e.g. road tolling, streaming passwords) can change a good's classification over time.
Provision choices
Quasi-public goods can be provided by the market, the government, or a mix. The choice depends on whether exclusion is practical and whether the good generates positive externalities that justify public funding.
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βοΈ Evaluation of Government Provision
- β Solves the free-rider problem β everyone pays through taxation.
- β Ensures essential goods are available (defence, law enforcement, street lighting).
- β Can internalise positive externalities (e.g. public health benefits of clean water systems).
- β No price mechanism β hard to know the optimal quantity (risk of over- or under-provision).
- β Government failure β political motives, bureaucratic inefficiency, corruption can distort allocation.
- β Opportunity cost β funds used for one public good can't be used elsewhere.
- β Taxpayers may disagree on priorities (should more be spent on defence or education?).
Evaluation means weighing both sides. In an IB essay, always discuss the strengths AND weaknesses of government provision, and consider whether there are market-based alternatives.