Can't really compare a natural monopoly (water utility) that should be the government with something that isn't a natural monopoly (research).
Can't really compare a natural monopoly (water utility) that should be the government with something that isn't a natural monopoly (research).
I think you can in the limited sense it supports the idea privatisation doesn't remove politics, just relocates it and often into a less democratically accountable place to boot.
Whenever a person or group has power over another person or group, politics necessarily exists. I don't think this fact can be avoided, as much as advocates of privatisation often argue that it can be.