Home

About
Board of Directors
Academic Advisory Council
Mission
Contact
Books
John Locke Series
Churchill Series
Books for Sale
Monographs
Shaftesbury Papers
Blackstone Commentaries
Collequies
Liberty Fund Conferences
Journals
Coke's Institutes of the Law
Public Choice Journal
Labour Relations / Public Policy Series
Journal of Labor Research
The Locke Luminary
Resources
Legal Resources
Featured Publication


Antonio Martino, Alex Chafuen, and Charles Rowley at the Sir Anthony Fisher International Memorial Awards. First Place presented to Charles Rowley for Public Goods and Private Communities by Fred Foldvary (1995).

Public Goods and Private Communities:

The Market Provision of Social Services, by Fred Foldvary (1994)


Do public goods and services, such as streets, parks and dams, have to be provided by government? In Public Goods and Private Communities, Fred Foldvary's innovative application of public choice and spatial theory to questions of urban economics and governance shows how collective goods can be provided by agents in a market process.

Rejecting the market-failure hypothesis, Dr. Foldvary argues that an entrepreneur can provide collective goods by consensual community agreements. Instead of studying particular services, as previous studies have done, this book concerns itself with entire private communities. A series of case studies demonstrates how real-world communities, such as Walt Disney World, the Reston Association in Virginia and the private neighbourhoods of St. Louis are in fact financing their own public goods and services in accordance with this theory. For such communities to rise and prosper, the author contends, government must eliminate zoning and many other restrictions, as well as the taxation of private services.

After considering the implications of his work for urban economies - at a time when many of America's cities are plagued by decay, violence and poverty - Dr. Foldvary argues that prosperity can be restored to cities if private communities are allowed to develop. As an original response to an urgent, contemporary problem this well-written book will be welcomed by social scientists, policy makers and business leaders seeking solutions to problems of urban decay.


Read Reviews of this Book:

Roy E. Cordato, Campbell University, The Freeman
Douglas W. Allen, Simon Fraser University, Journal of Economic Literature
Laissez Faire Books
Mark Pennington, Journal of the Institute of Economic Affairs
R.A. Beauregard, University of Pittsburgh, Choice
John McClaughry, Reason
Ulbrich, Holley H., Clemson University
Yeager, Leland B., Auburn University, Public Choice