George Mason University School of Law Working Papers Series

George Mason University Working Paper Series

 

An Economic Analysis of the Private and Social Costs of the Provision of Cybersecurity and other Public Security Goods

Bruce H. Kobayashi, George Mason University School of Law

Article comments

Forthcoming in Supreme Court Economic Review (Vol. 14, 2005)

Abstract

This paper examines the incentives of private actors to invest in cybersecurity. Prior analyses have examined investments in security goods, such as locks or safes that have the characteristics of private goods. The analysis in this paper extends this analysis to examine expenditures on security goods, such as information, that have the characteristics of public goods. In contrast to the private goods case, where individual uncoordinated security expenditures can lead to an overproduction of security, the public goods case can result in the underproduction of security expenditures, and incentives to free ride. Thus, the formation of collective organizations may be necessary to facilitate the production of public security goods, and the protection of information produced by the collective organization should be a central feature of such organizations.

Subject Area

Criminal Law and Procedure, Intellectual Property Law, Law and Economics

Recommended Citation

Bruce H. Kobayashi, "An Economic Analysis of the Private and Social Costs of the Provision of Cybersecurity and other Public Security Goods" (April 2005). George Mason University School of Law Working Papers Series. George Mason University Working Paper Series. Working Paper 26.
http://law.bepress.com/gmulwps/gmule/art26

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