80,000 Hours rates global public goods a "potential highest priority area": an issue that, if more thoroughly examined, could rank as a top global challenge.[3]
Buterin, Vitalik, Zoë Hitzig & E. Glen Weyl (2019) A flexible design for funding public goods, Management Science, vol. 65, pp. 5171–5187.
economics | quadratic payments
Black, John (1997) A Dictionary of Economics, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Ord, Toby (2020) The Precipice: Existential Risk and the Future of Humanity, London: Bloomsbury Publishing, ch. 2
80,000 Hours (2022) Our current list of pressing world problems, 80,000 Hours.
Public goods are goods or services that are open to use by all members of society if they are provided at all. Public goods are both non-excludable and non-rivalrous, i.e. they are goods no society member can be excluded from consuming if they are at all supplied, and for which consumption by one member does not reduce the quantity available to others.[1] Global public goods are public goods for which the pool of beneficiaries spans the entire globe. And Intergenerational global public goods, in turn, are global public goods for which the pool of beneficiaries spans multiple generations. An example of an intergenerational global public good is protection from existential risk.[2]
Sandmo, Agnar (2018) Public goods, in Garett Jones (ed.) The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 3rd ed., London: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 10973–10984.
Black, John (1997) A Dictionary of Economics, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Ord, Toby (2020) The Precipice: Existential Risk and the Future of Humanity, London: Bloomsbury Publishing, ch. 2
Public goods are goods or services that are open to use by all members of society if they are provided at all. Public goods are both non-excludable and non-rivalrous, i.e. they are goods no society member can be excluded from consuming if they are at all supplied, and for which consumption by one member does not reduce the quantity available to others.[1] Global public goods are public goods for which the pool of beneficiaries spans the entire globe. And i
Intergenerationalntergenerational global public goods, in turn, are global public goods for which the pool of beneficiaries spans multiple generations. An example of an intergenerational global public good is protection from existential risk.[2]