Category
page 1Goods

service
economic product that directly satisfies wants without producing a lasting asset

goods
thumb|Tangible medical goods stacked in a warehouse|alt=Cardboard boxes stacked in a warehouse

cargo
thumb|An articulated double-stack rail transport|double-stack [[well car owned by the TTX Company. The capacity car is a Gunderson Maxi-IV.]]
public good
good that is non-excludable and non-rival
Giffen good
product that people consume more of as the price rises
luxury good
type of desirable good
substitute good
economics concept of goods considered interchangeable
final good
finished product intended for sale to consumers who will consume it
Veblen effect
Luxury good for which the demand increases as the price increases
complementary good
economic concept of a good whose demand is directly tied to another good's demand
inferior good
good that decreases in demand when consumer income rises
normal good
economic good that increases in demand when incomes rise
Ersatz good
substitute good, particularly in wartime
goods and services
outcome of human efforts to meet the wants and needs of people
free good
concept in economics
durable good
good that does not quickly wear out
private good
good which is excludable and rivalrous
club good
non-private good

non-durable goods
thumb|right|200px|With this razor blade mounted on a handle, the razor blade head is a consumable good which is disposed after several shaves. The head clicks onto the handle, which is a long-lasting durable good.
Consumables are goods that are intended to be used up, or in the case of food, eaten. People have, for example, always consumed food and water. Consumables are in contrast to long-lasting durable goods such as cars and washing machines. Disposable products are a particular, extreme case of consumables, because their end-of-life is reached after a single use.
necessity good
products bought regardless of income
rivalry
in economics, a phenomenon in which the consumption of some goods prevents their simultaneous consumption by other consumers, occurring for most tangible goods and some nontangible goods (e.g. Internet domains), but not for others (e.g. TV broadcast)
intangible good
good that does not have a physical nature and can be separated from its creator's labor
merit good
good that would be under-consumed, if left to the free market forces
common good
in economics, a non-private resource
excludability
thumb|Air, whether it is clean or polluted, cannot exclude anyone from its use, and so it is considered a non-excludable "good". A good can be non-excludable regardless of how desirable it could be to be excluded from consuming it (such as smog or pollution in a city).
superior good
good that is scarce and has a high price
independent goods
goods that are neither complements nor substitutes
Positional good
economic good whose value is determined by its distribution within a population

Global public good
a public good available on a more-or-less worldwide basis
Information good
experience good
Global commons
term used for international commons in political economic theory
Search good
Ordinary good
conceptual type of goods in microeconomics
Credence good