---- OR ----
 
 


Online Payments by SecureTrading
Acceptance Mark

Search Result:

Image not yet available
Title: Welfare Economics
Edited by: Paul E Weston, Robert N Townsend
ISBN10-13: 1604569468 : 9781604569469
Illustrations: tables & charts
Format: Hardback
Size: 180x260mm
Pages: 268
Weight: .794 Kg.
Published: Nova Science Publishers, Inc (US) - April   2009
List Price: 119.99 Pounds Sterling
Availability: In Stock   Qty Available: 2
Subjects: Macroeconomics
Welfare economics is a branch of economics that uses microeconomic techniques to simultaneously determine allocative efficiency within an economy and the income distribution associated with it. It analyses social welfare, however measured, in terms of economic activities of the individuals that comprise the theoretical society considered. As such, individuals, with associated economic activities, are the basic units for aggregating to social welfare, whether of a group, a community, or a society, and there is no "social welfare" apart from the "welfare" associated with its individual units. Here, 'welfare' in its most general sense refers to well-being. Welfare economics typically takes individual preferences as given and stipulates a welfare improvement in Pareto efficiency terms from social state A to social state B if at least one person prefers B and no one else opposes it. There is no requirement of a unique quantitative measure of the welfare improvement implied by this. Another aspect of welfare treats income/goods distribution, including equality, as a further dimension of welfare. Social welfare refers to the overall welfare of society. With sufficiently strong assumptions, it can be specified as the summation of the welfare of all the individuals in the society. Welfare may be measured either cardinally in terms of "utils" or dollars, or measured ordinally in terms of Pareto efficiency. The cardinal method in "utils" is seldom used in pure theory today because of aggregation problems that make the meaning of the method doubtful, except on widely challenged underlying assumptions. In applied welfare economics, such as in cost-benefit analysis, money-value estimates are often used, particularly where income-distribution effects are factored into the analysis or seem unlikely to undercut the analysis. It is conventional to distinguish two sides to welfare economics: economic efficiency and income distribution. Economic efficiency is largely positive and deals with the "size of the pie". Income distribution is much more normative and deals with "dividing up the pie". Other classifying terms or problems in welfare economics include externalities, equity, justice, inequality, and altruism. This book presents the latest research in the field from around the world.
Table of Contents:
Preface; Japanese Housing Tenure Choice and Welfare Implications after the Revision of the Tenant Protection Law; Strategic Democracy and Natural Resource Overuse: Groundwater Depletion in Tamil Nadu; Human Rights, Development and the WTO's Non-Compliance; The Insitutions of Poverty; The Identification and Measurement of Poverty; Welfare Effects of Ecological Tax Reforms; The Welfare Effects of Non-Linear Growth; Social Capital: Reciprocity or Satisfaction?; Why are Trade Agreements Mostly Regional? A Welfare Analysis by Transportation Costs; Welfare Dynamics of the Ricardian-Mills Model in the Z-Domain; Index.
Basket (0)
Delivery is chargeable
Click here for catalogues
 
Follow us on:
Find us on Google+