> Now you are assuming that "governments" and "citizens" are two disjoint groups with different agendas. That's a really bleak way of looking at it, at least in functioning democracies.
Functioning democracies are sort of like spherical cows or frictionless surfaces: they don’t actually exist but we pretend they do as a simplifying assumption. Sometimes we are having more sophisticated discussions about bovine anatomy or the friction of ice; other times we discuss the principal-agent problem as it applies to the administrative state within a democracy.
Functioning democracies are sort of like spherical cows or frictionless surfaces: they don’t actually exist but we pretend they do as a simplifying assumption. Sometimes we are having more sophisticated discussions about bovine anatomy or the friction of ice; other times we discuss the principal-agent problem as it applies to the administrative state within a democracy.