generally, yes. In the case of Walmart, there is a good case to be made that 
the costs to the community exceed the benefit. The individual possibly might be 
better off if the alternative is unemployment.

>OK, so in this case. Say the government makes a deal, and they bring in a
>big store, that store creates jobs that weren't there before. It provides
>items that weren't available before, and provides other items at a better
>cost than before.
>
>Doesn't this benefit the individual?

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