The traditional hypothesis of public products
The traditional hypothesis of public products characterizes productivity under romanticized states of complete data, a circumstance previously recognized in Wicksell (1896).[30] Samuelson stressed that this postures issues for the effective arrangement of public. According to the Public Goods hypothesis, we expect that if genes are public goods we would see a local tree-like pattern to emerge from the process of gene acquisition by a genome, followed by its inheritance by the offspring, however, we would also expect to see that there is no global tree-like pattern.

