@techreport{f8daecf1067c40229a6a337928dfb246,
title = "Samuelson Machines and the Optimal Public-Private Mix",
abstract = "Standard economic analysis assumes the sets of public and private goods to be exogenously given. Yet societies very often choose the public-private mix, using resources to convert seemingly private goods into ones with public goods characteristics and vice versa. And, in practice, we see a bewilderingly large variety of public-private mixes across societies. This papers advances an analysis of the choice of the public-private mix in the framework of voluntary contributions to public goods provision, by envisaging that, starting from a situation where all goods have private characteristics, some goods can be changed to have public goods characteristics at a cost (by purchasing a 'Samuelson machine'). It characterizes the jointly optimal choice of the public-private mix and the efficient supply or not of the public goods in the mix. This characterization generates a number of testable predictions on the public-private mix, and on the prevalence of free riding.",
author = "Simon Clark and Ravi Kanbur",
year = "2004",
month = mar,
language = "English",
series = "ESE Discussion Papers",
publisher = "Edinburgh School of Economics, University of Edinburgh",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Edinburgh School of Economics, University of Edinburgh",
}