Honors Economics
Non-excludability is a characteristic of certain goods whereby it is not possible to prevent individuals from accessing or using them. This feature leads to situations where individuals cannot be excluded from benefiting from a good, even if they do not pay for it, which plays a crucial role in understanding market failures and the provision of public goods and common resources. The inability to exclude individuals from using a good often results in underinvestment in those goods since providers cannot capture the full benefits, leading to inefficiencies in resource allocation.
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