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Original scientific paper

OLSON MANCUR - POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INTEREST GROUPS

Tonči Kursar ; Faculty of Political Science, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia


Full text: croatian pdf 87 Kb

page 192-202

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Abstract

The author discusses the basic structure of Mancur Olson's political economy. He highlights three concepts on which it is based - public goods, interest groups, and selective incentives. The last concept represents Olson's innovation in contemporary political science. The author's central methodical assumption is based on the insight that Olson's key theory is linked with the so-called public goods paradox. Unlike private goods, public goods are non-competitive and non-exclusive, which means that it is not possible to bar those who do not share the costs of their production from using them. On the basis of this, Olson has developed the original theory of interest groups. By looking into the costs of organizing along interest lines as a collective activity whose result is a public good, he distinguishes between large, heterogeneous, and small, homogeneous groups. Besides, he has shown that, regarding public goods, individuals tend to behave as free riders, defaulters who try to avoid the costs of securing these goods. The author shows that Olson has, notwithstanding certain flimsiness of his reductionist methodology, significantly revamped political science.

Keywords

Hrčak ID:

105752

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/105752

Publication date:

18.6.1997.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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