Examples of merit good in the following topics:
-
- Market failure occurs due to inefficiency in the allocation of goods and services.
- Lack of public goods: public goods are goods where the total cost of production does not increase with the number of consumers.
- Underproduction of merit goods: a merit good is a private good that society believes is under consumed, often with positive externalities.
- For example, education, healthcare, and sports centers are considered merit goods.
- Overprovision of demerit goods: a demerit good is a private good that society believes is over consumed, often with negative externalities.
-
- The market will fail by not supplying the socially optimal amount of the good.
- The imbalance causes allocative inefficiency, which is the over- or under-consumption of the good.
- direct provision of merit and public goods - governments control the supply of goods that have positive externalities.
- taxation - placing taxes on certain goods to discourage use and internalize external costs.
- subsidies - reducing the price of a good based on the public benefit that is gained.
-
- Valuation is the process by which individuals assign worth, merit or importance to a phenomenon (good or event).
- Economics then is the study of processes by which individuals and societies value resources, goods, alternatives, choices, and behavior.
-
- Due to the funding process of expansionary policy, there is a lack of consensus among economists with respect to the merits of fiscal stimulus.
- This may in turn reduce aggregate demand for goods and services, which defeats the purpose of a fiscal stimulus.
-
- The country's economic success seems to validate the view that the economy operates best when government leaves businesses and individuals to succeed -- or fail -- on their own merits in open, competitive markets.
-
- The aggregate demand for a public good is derived differently from the aggregate demand for private goods.
- The marginal benefit of a public good diminishes as the level of the good provided increases.
- Public goods are non-rivalrous, so everyone can consume each unit of a public good.
- The aggregate demand for a public good is the sum of marginal benefits to each person at each quantity of the good provided .
- Unlike public goods, society does not have to agree on a given quantity of a private good, and any one person can consume more of the private good than another at a given price.
-
- Private goods: Private goods are excludable and rival.
- Common goods: Common goods are non-excludable and rival.
- Club goods: Club goods are excludable but non-rival.
- This type of good often requires a "membership" payment in order to enjoy the benefits of the goods.
- Public goods: Public goods are non-excludable and non-rival.
-
- For substitute goods, as the price of one good rises, the demand for the substitute good increases.
- Conversely, the demand for a substitute good falls when the price of another good is decreased.
- Two goods that complement each other have a negative cross elasticity of demand: as the price of good Y rises, the demand for good X falls.
- Two goods that are substitutes have a positive cross elasticity of demand: as the price of good Y rises, the demand for good X rises.
- Two goods that are independent have a zero cross elasticity of demand: as the price of good Y rises, the demand for good X stays constant.
-
- Unlike the market demand curve for private goods, where individual demand curves are summed horizontally, individual demand curves for public goods are summed vertically to get the market demand curve.
- Often, the government supplies the public good.
- The supply curve for a public good is equal to its marginal cost curve.
- The public good provider uses cost-benefit analysis to decide whether to provide a particular good by comparing marginal costs and marginal benefits.
- The optimal quantity of public good occurs where MB = MC.
-
- What goods and services should be produced?
- Since not everything can be produced, some goods must be sacrificed for other goods.
- There are often different ways to produce a good.
- The amount of the good to be produced may influence the ways in which a good is produced
- The distribution of goods among the members of society may also influence the ways in which different goods are valued.