Club Goods - YouTube

Channel: Marginal Revolution University

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- [Prof. Alex Tabarrok] In the previous video
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we covered public goods,
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which are nonexcludable, and nonrival.
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Let's now turn to club goods.
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Club goods are also nonrival,
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but unlike public goods, they are excludable.
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Let's take Wi-Fi as an example.
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You might need a password to connect to a Wi-Fi network.
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That's what makes it excludable.
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However, assuming that there isn't much congestion,
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there's no cost to allowing more people onto the network.
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Up to a point, therefore, Wi-Fi is non-rival.
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HBO -- that's another example of a club good.
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It's excludable -- you have to pay $15.99 a month
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or something like that to get into the HBO club.
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But more viewers don't add to costs,
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so HBO is also nonrival.
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Markets can provide club goods,
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but at the price of some inefficiency.
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Imagine for example that someone is willing to pay
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$8 per month to watch Game of Thrones.
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The marginal cost of HBO
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providing that viewer with Game of Thrones --
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it's basically zero.
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The potential viewer is willing to pay $8,
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which is more than the cost.
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Yet they don't get to watch,
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because the price of HBO is even higher --
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$15.99 per month.
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This is unlike competitive markets that we covered earlier,
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where we saw trades get made
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so long as the value is greater than the cost.
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For club goods, there's some loss of efficiency in exclusion.
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In excluding this particular viewer, for example,
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since the benefit to the viewer is greater than the cost,
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yet that trade is not made.
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Now, the fact that HBO charters for entry to it's club --
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that means that HBO, however,
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has an incentive to figure out what viewers really want to watch.
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That's an important benefit.
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The diversity, creativity and responsiveness of the market
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probably outweighs the loss of efficiency
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in having the market produce club goods.
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As we covered in the last video,
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public goods tend to be under-provided,
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because they cannot be adequately charged for.
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One solution to this problem
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is figuring out how to turn a public good into a club good.
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And entrepreneurs have created excludable goods,
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like cable tv and satellite radio,
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that are alternatives to the public goods
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of broadcast television and radio.
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Other entrepreneurs have even discovered ways
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to profit from providing public goods
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even without relying on exclusion.
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How's that possible?
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Radio and broadcast television -- they're public goods.
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They're nonexcludable, and nonrival,
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and yet they are provided privately by markets.
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In this case, the market overcame the challenge through advertising.
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Advertising -- it really works quite well for TV and radio.
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The marginal costs of providing someone a radio or TV signal --
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it's zero.
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And the price -- it's zero as well.
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Price equals marginal cost -- that's efficient.
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Now, you do have to watch the ads,
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and that's profitable because they're selling the ad time.
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Here's another familiar example,
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maybe you've heard of it -- Google.
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The search technology and the database are nonrival.
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Google could exclude by adding a subscription cost.
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But it chooses not to,
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since it makes more money by giving the product away for free
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and selling advertising.
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Now let's go back to Wi-Fi.
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It's a very interesting case,
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because we can see Wi-Fi provided in almost all possible ways.
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It's sold by private firms, like Sprint,
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who exclude non-payers.
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It's offered free to attract customers
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at places like Starbucks.
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It's free in other places if you watch ads.
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And it's even provided for free by some local governments.
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So we see all types of provision methods for Wi-Fi,
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and it's not clear which is the best,
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or even if there is a best method.
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Okay, that's it for club goods.
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Next we'll be looking at nonexcludable,
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but rival resources --
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the common resources.
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- [Narrator] If you want to test yourself,
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click "Practice Questions."
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Or, if you're ready to move on, just click "Next Video."
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