Lindahl Equilibrium

  

Categories: Financial Theory

The Lindahl equilibrium, proposed by Erik Lindahl, is that the amount that everyone should pay for public goods should equal the marginal benefit that they’re getting out of the good.

For instance, everyone’s paying the same amount to national defense, and everyone’s gaining the same marginal benefit from it, for the most part. But what about something like a park? The Lindahl equilibrium says that, if you never go to the park, you shouldn't pay a cent for it, and if you go to the park often, you should pay for that amount. Yet...this is why public goods are public goods: they are for the public. Switching to a pay-for-park system would more or less make it private.

As you can see from the park situation, the Lindahl equilibrium isn’t applicable in many real-life, public good scenarios. Still, it serves as a way to contrast the free rider problems that can come with public goods, where people are incentivized to consume more than they’re paying.

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Econ: What is Public Policy Design?2 Views

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And finance Allah shmoop What is public policy design for

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the government Laws and public policy are two sides of

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to go through a long process of being a bill

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before getting to be a law Will bills have to

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go through Congress sit on the president's desk a while

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gathering dust and then jump through all kinds of food

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before turning themselves into laws Public policy is all about

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how those laws air actually implemented or carried out Oftentimes

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the laws we create our more idealistic rather than realistic

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like we just don't always have All the resource is

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all of economics we have to pick and choose how

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unlimited wants And yes of course different political leanings at

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most laws air staying the same well how those laws

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or carried out via public policy designed can very drastically

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depending on policy goals of well who is in power

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at that time mean green Controversial machine and fastest growing

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industry at the moment in the U S Marijuana US

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federal law defines marijuana as a Class one drug which

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means it's one of the worst of the worst class

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one drugs or drugs deemed by the federal government to

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have no medicinal purpose and should not be used ever

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even under the supervision of a doctor Well Meanwhile states

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around the US have been increasingly passing laws saying that

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medicinal marijuana and in some cases recreational marijuana is totally

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chill Well the federal law that whole Class one classifications

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think it says that federal law enforcement legally has the

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right toe bust any marijuana business or users or even

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doctors that they want from a recreational twentysomething pot smoker

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to a sixty something medicinal You use your whip cancer

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or block homer or something Well the federal government could

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enforce the federal law but they really don't There are

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granny's door while she's taking her doctor prescribed pot pills

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for her chronic back pain you know sory Well In

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two thousand thirteen the head of the Department of Justice

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issued this thing called the Coal memo Named after the

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author Attorney General Kohl Wolf the memo is a unique

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written example of public policy design That memo stated that

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the U S Department of Justice with its limited resource

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is would not enforce the federal illegality of marijuana in

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states where marijuana was voted to be legal Assuming these

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states were being will generally responsible about it As long

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as the states were regulating their growth distribution sale taxes

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in someone the Justice Department would be hands off on

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state legal marijuana businesses and consumers Instead the Justice Department

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said it would use its limited resource is to help

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states make sure that marijuana was not crossing state borders

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illegally not causing violence and accidents and not making profits

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for gangs and mobs and cartels Right In two thousand

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eighteen there was a new sheriff in town attorney general

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that is being known A critic of Marijuana KG Jeff

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Sessions rescinded the cold memo It was his way of

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changing public policy for how the federal government would handle

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the distribution of marijuana Well since the marijuana industry in

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the U S Has a whole lot of momentum and

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is making a lot of tax money for states governors

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and senators from marijuana legal states said That's not very

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dope of you sir Well some political critics say the

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cold memo was an overreach of political power since it

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varied so much from the written law which made it

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a okay to rescind some economists Ava Calm Emma was

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on the right track Since bringing marijuana into the legal

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sphere makes it regulate herbal and taxable which could reduce

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cartel violence and pump money into you know the U

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S economy instead of well you know into those cartel

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pockets everyone else says Well if that's not the federal

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policy on marijuana now what is the policy Well many

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believe the actions of the DOJ won't change too much

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mostly because they've got bigger fish to fry with Their

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limited resource is so far not too much of a

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kerfuffle has been made since the Cold memo was shut

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down Well states and cities are still making moves to

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make marijuana legal in the DOJ is mostly spending its

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energy elsewhere So yeah public policy designed can completely change

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is way less clear cut with so many actors involved

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you know from firms and regulators To people and politicians

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public policy is a messy complicated and infuriating process So

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