SEMAINE D'ÉTUDE SUR LE ROLE DE L’ANALYSE ECONOMETRIQUE ETC. 189
costs, but particularly the benefits, are far more difficult to
ascertain and measure than in the case of private investments.
This follows from the very natures of the firm and the.govern-
ment and from the kinds of enterprise that a government is
likely to engage in in a mixed economy.
When a firm contemplates an investment it will be con-
cerned very predominantly with the increase in the salable
product or the decrease in the operating costs that will result
from it. Both of these are readily expressible in monetary
terms and the conversion from physical units to economic value
is relatively easy because prices for the commodities at issue
can be obtained, with some degree of haziness and extrapolation
to be sure, from the free markets on which those commodities
are traded.
A government’s interests and the results in expects from
its investments are quite different. Indeed, the greater the
extent to which the kind of appraisal that a firm uses is ade-
quate, the more likely is the government of a mixed economy
to leave the undertaking to the private sector. The kinds of
results in which a government is interested can be outlined. as
follows :
1. Frequently government enterprises do produce salable
products, comparable to those of private enterprises. This is
likely to be the case where the product is a « natural mono-
poly » or is particularly important to the health and safety of
the community or to the operation of the government itself.
2. In recent years, especially, governments have entered
fields characterized by significant economies of scale, to gain
which requires larger commitments of capital than private indi-
viduals are able or willing to mobilize.
3. The government is likely to undertake the production
of goods for which there is a marked discrepancy between mar-
ket price and social value, or for which“a private enterprise
51 Dorfman - pag. 3