The library
414 articles across Financial Literacy and Economic Intelligence — shuffled fresh each visit.

The Four Types of Goods: Why Excludability and Rivalry Determine How Markets Work
Two yes-or-no questions sort every good into one of four boxes. The box decides whether a market, a government, or neither can supply it well.
- Two properties classify every good: excludability (can you keep non-payers out?) and rivalry (does one person's use leave less for others?)
- The excludable-and-rival box holds private goods, which markets handle efficiently on their own
- The non-excludable-and-non-rival box holds public goods, which markets underprovide because no one can be made to pay

Government vs. Market Provision: When Public Supply Makes Sense and When It Doesn't
Government or market? The honest answer weighs a real market failure against real government failure. A framework that does both, step by step.

Pigovian Taxes and Subsidies: Putting a Price on What the Market Ignores
A Pigovian tax equals the harm a transaction inflicts on third parties. Here is a carbon-tax worked example, line by line, and where the idea gets tricky.

The Coase Theorem: When Private Bargaining Solves What Regulation Can't
Ronald Coase showed that if property rights are clear and bargaining is cheap, private parties can solve externalities themselves — and where that breaks.

The Tragedy of the Commons: How Individual Rationality Destroys Shared Resources
One of the richest fishing grounds on Earth went functionally extinct. The cod collapse is the tragedy of the commons in real life, and a guide to fixing it.

Common Resources: Rival But Non-Excludable
A common resource is rival (one person's use reduces availability for others) but non-excludable (no one can be effectively prevented from using it).

Pigouvian Subsidy: Paying for the Benefits Others Provide
A Pigouvian subsidy is a payment to producers or consumers of goods with positive externalities, set equal to the marginal external benefit.

Subsidy: When Government Picks Up Part of the Tab
A subsidy is a government payment to producers or consumers that lowers the effective price of a good or service.

Negative Externality: When Transactions Impose Costs on Others
A negative externality is an uncompensated cost imposed on third parties by a market transaction.

Externality: The Cost or Benefit That Markets Forget to Price
An externality is an uncompensated cost or benefit that a market transaction imposes on third parties.

Positive Externality: When Transactions Benefit People Who Didn't Pay
A positive externality is an uncompensated benefit conferred on third parties by a market transaction.

When Markets Get It Wrong: The Four Sources of Market Failure
Markets usually allocate resources well, but four specific defects make them fail predictably: externalities, public goods, market power, and bad information.

The Free-Rider Problem: Why Public Goods Don't Fund Themselves
If you benefit whether or not you pay, why pay? That thought, multiplied across everyone, is why public goods go unfunded, and a model for fixing it.

Pigouvian Tax: Making Polluters Pay the True Cost
A Pigouvian tax is a per-unit tax on a good or activity set equal to the external cost it imposes.

Market Failure: When Markets Produce the Wrong Outcome
Market failure occurs when a free market fails to allocate resources efficiently on its own.

The Tragedy of the Commons: When Shared Resources Are Destroyed
The tragedy of the commons describes how rational individual behavior destroys a shared resource.

Property Rights: The Foundation of Market Exchange
Property rights are the legal rights to use, exclude others from, and transfer resources. Secure, well-defined property rights are necessary for markets to…