The Atlantic bluefin tuna was once so abundant it was sold as cat food. Commercial fishing technology — sonar, freezer ships, GPS — progressively found and harvested fish that were increasingly scarce. Each vessel crew had a rational incentive to catch as many fish as possible before others did. No single crew's restraint would save the stock if others kept fishing. By the 1990s, spawning populations had collapsed to a small fraction of their historical levels. No one owned the tuna; no one could exclude other fishing fleets; each fish caught was one less for others. A common resource depleted by individually rational, collectively catastrophic behavior.
In plain terms
A common resource is a good that is rival (each unit consumed is unavailable for others) but non-excludable (no one can effectively be prevented from using it). The rival property means individual consumption depletes the shared stock; the non-excludable property means no pricing mechanism prevents overuse.
The problem is a ratio: the private benefit of consuming one more unit is captured entirely by the individual; the cost — depleting the shared stock slightly for all current and future users — is spread across everyone. Each user's private incentive pushes toward maximum consumption, even when every user collectively would prefer a sustainable use rate.
Common resources include:
- Ocean fisheries (rival: fish caught is gone; non-excludable: open seas)
- Groundwater aquifers (rival: water pumped is depleted; non-excludable: multiple overlying landowners)
- Open-access grazing land (rival: grass eaten; non-excludable: public land)
- Unpriced road space (rival: congested roads; non-excludable: public highways)
- The atmosphere as a carbon sink (rival: absorptive capacity used up; non-excludable: all emitters)
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's fisheries data tracks common resource depletion: over 30 percent of global fish stocks are currently overfished — the direct consequence of open-access exploitation of a common resource.
Why it works this way
The economics of common resources is a race: each user maximizes their take before others deplete the stock. The resource is overused until its value is driven toward zero — the equilibrium where the cost of harvesting equals the benefit of the remaining stock. This is the tragedy of the commons: the individually rational pursuit of private benefit depletes the shared resource to the detriment of all users.
The mechanism is the same as a negative externality: each unit consumed imposes an external cost (reduced stock for others) that the user doesn't bear. Unlike a tradeable private good where the price coordinates use, the non-excludable common resource has no price mechanism to signal scarcity or ration access.
A real example
The Ogallala Aquifer underlies eight U.S. states and provides irrigation water for roughly 30 percent of all U.S. groundwater irrigation. The USGS Water Resources data documents that the aquifer is being drawn down at rates 10–100 times faster than natural recharge in some areas. Overlying landowners have property rights to pump, but no individual has an incentive to pump less — any restraint they show just leaves water for neighbors to pump. The aquifer is a classic common resource being overexploited.
Why it matters
Common resources are the economic structure behind the planet's most serious environmental challenges: fishery depletion, groundwater exhaustion, deforestation, and climate change are all common resource problems. The solutions — privatization, quantity regulation, and community management — each have their place depending on the number of users, enforceability, and existing governance institutions. Nobel laureate Elinor Ostrom's research demonstrated that community-based management can sustainably govern common resources without either privatization or regulation, when user communities can create and enforce shared rules.





