Public Choice Economics (optional material)
As historian John L. Kelley explains in an online interview, Public Choice economists "rejected the 'naïve' assumption that men were any more prone to serve the public interest when they became bureaucrats than when they were private individuals." Whereas previous schools of economics focused on supposed market imperfections, presumably to be remedied by government, the Public Choice school "reversed the lens and examined government performance, using the tools of economic analysis."

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