In: Economics
In real world is it possible to have effective functioning markets in the absence of private property.give 2-3 example scenarios
Markets are efficient at producing private goods, largely because producers and consumers have the right of ownership of the resources exchanged in an economic transaction involving a private good. However, markets are less efficient when property rights do not exist.
Many resources that are directly, or indirectly, used in an exchange have no specific or identifiable owner, and are collectively available for everyone to use. For example, goods transported by ship use the world’s oceans, but there is no charge because on one owns the sea. Such resources are called common property resources, and they are free to use because it is too expensive, or physically impossible, to establish legal boundaries. An absence of boundaries allow free-riders uncontrolled access, which can result in the over-exploitation or misuse of the resource.
Examples of common property resources include; oceans, rivers and canals; beaches; the air; roads and pavements, and even images, words and ideas. Because property rights cannot be established, the effectiveness of markets in terms of the allocation, pricing and rationing of these resources is substantially reduced.
The effects of a lack of property rights
The absence of property rights can lead to a number of consequences:
Remedies
Granting or extending property rights
Though complex to design and implement, government can grant property rights over scarce resources in an attempt to protect them from opportunism, misuse, and over-use. Allocating property rights will encourage the appointed owners to protect the resource by allowing the owners to sue those who exploit the resource. When applied to resources that are under attack from pollution, extending property rights will enable the owners to sue the polluters.
For example, the National Rivers Authority, now part of the Environment Agency, was created with powers to act ‘as if’ it owned the UK’s rivers. This allowed it to police the rivers and sue polluters and opportunists, such as poachers. Once rights are allocated it may be possible to identify those individuals, firms or organisations that abuse or misuse the environment. Supporters of the extension of property rights see it a crucial to the formation and effective operation of markets.
Property rights can be extended by creating laws to protect physical property; intellectual property, such as copyrights to protect ideas, songs, music, books and film; patents, to protect inventions; and trade marks to protect commercial images and logos.
Property rights can also be extended by creating territorial waters around a coast. Once rights are established property owners can police the use of their property, and penalise those who misuse it.