The economy of Smith's day was quite different from today. In the late 1700s, most economic enterprises were small, family operations. For such operations, land, labor, capital, and management often resided in essentially the same entity, and farming was still the dominant occupation. Economics assumes that trade always takes place between two people or groups that are equally competent and capable of pursuing their own self-interest. Sometimes this is a valid assumption, but often it is not. Economics ignores the fact that the world is filled with people (and countries) who are inherently unequal in competence and capabilities. It ignores the fact that giant corporations are capable of totally dominating conditions of trade with smaller businesses or individuals. By their very nature, industrial corporations attempt to dominate in their transactions with all, including with the natural environment. On the other hand collective actions against austerity measures seriously cannot be …show more content…
Using this method, we add up benefit from the particular policy and compare them to the cost. The policy is justified only if the benefits are greater than the cost. Two policies, both with greater benefits, the one with larger net benefits will be adopted by the