Multiple Choice

A planner seeks to maximize a society's welfare, represented by the function W(C, G), where C is total private consumption and G is the level of a public good. The society has a fixed total income Y. The cost of providing the public good is given by the function c(G), which means the total amount available for private consumption is C = Y - c(G). A student attempts to find the optimal level of G by setting the partial derivative of the welfare function with respect to G equal to zero: ∂W/∂G = 0. Why is this approach incorrect for finding the optimal G?

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Updated 2025-08-12

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