ECON 200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 22: Marginal Cost, Marginal Utility, Voting Paradox

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Political economy uses economic models to study a type of choice that is common in the public sector. Public choice is the process by which individual preferences are combined into collective decisions. A democratic society stresses the importance of individual values and tastes in such an aggregation one person, one vote expresses this individualistic underpinning of our political system. For each pair of alternatives a & b, either a is at least as good as b or b is at least as good as a. For each triple of alternatives, a, b & c: if a is at least as good as. B, and b is at least as good as c, a is at least as good as c. For each pair of alternatives a & b, social preferences specify one of the following: a beats b, b beats a, or a ties b.

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