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by Prophasi
4694 days ago
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Those incentives are often there when a private company and the government make a deal. It's certainly not a problem with for-profit entities in general, though: Apple and Ford and IKEA and every other private manufacturer has those same incentives -- decrease cost and quality and increase price, with a corresponding interest in recidivism. Obviously in government scenarios -- defense contracting, roads, schools, prisons, utilities -- local or regional (or temporal) monopolies suppress the competition that keeps other companies' base desires in check on the open market. There are a lot of pressures to the contrary and obvious reasons it's the initial path of least resistance to grant such monopolies, but I wonder if there's a better way to structure deals like these to encourage competition at the same time. |
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