Intangible good
An intangible good is claimed to be a type of good that does not have a physical nature, as opposed to a physical good (an object). Digital goods such as downloadable music, mobile apps or virtual goods used in virtual economies are proposed to be examples of intangible goods.[1]
References
- ^ "Intangible product". Collins Dictionary.
Further reading
- Bannock, Graham et al.. (1997). Dictionary of Economics, Penguin Books.
- Milgate, Murray (1987), "goods and commodities," The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 2, pp. 546–48. Includes historical and contemporary uses of the terms in economics.
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Types of goods
- Anti-rival goods
- Capital goods
- Club goods
- Common goods
- Common-pool resource
- Complementary goods vs. Substitute goods vs. Independent goods
- Composite goods
- Credence goods
- (Non-)durable goods
- (Post-)experience goods
- Final goods
- Free goods vs. Positional goods
- Giffen goods
- Global commons
- Global public goods
- Inferior goods
- Information goods
- Intangible goods
- Intermediate goods
- Luxury goods
- Merit goods and demerit goods
- Neutral goods
- Normal goods
- Ordinary goods
- Private goods
- Public goods
- (Non-)rivalrous goods and (Non-)excludable goods
- Search goods
- Superior goods
- Used goods
- Veblen goods