Welfare Economics
Welfare Economics
Welfare Economics
associated economic activities, are the basic units for aggregating to social
welfare" apart from the "welfare" associated with its individual units.
state B if at least one person prefers B and no one else opposes it. There is no
Social welfare refers to the overall welfare of society. With sufficiently strong
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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
where income-distribution effects are factored into the analysis or seem unlikely
The capabilities approach to welfare argues that freedom - what people are free
Neoclassical approach and the New welfare economics approach. The early
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Additional consumption provides smaller and smaller increases in utility
simply by summing all the individual utility functions. The New Welfare
discipline and the distribution aspect and treats them differently. Questions of
efficiency are assessed with criteria such as Pareto efficiency and the Kaldor-
distributed to the people who can gain the most utility from them. Many
made better off without making someone else worse off. This ideal state of
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The marginal rates of substitution in consumption are identical for all
consumers. This occurs when no consumer can be made better off without
The marginal resource cost is equal to the marginal revenue product for all
There are a number of conditions that, most economists agree, may lead to
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Price discrimination and price skimming.
efficiency, two compensation tests have been developed. Any change usually
makes some people better off while making others worse off, so these tests ask
what would happen if the winners were to compensate the losers. Using the
amount the gainers are prepared to pay is greater than the minimum amount that
the losers are prepared to accept. Under the Hicks criterion, an activity will
contribute to Pareto optimality if the maximum amount the losers are prepared
to offer to the gainers in order to prevent the change is less than the minimum
amount the gainers are prepared to accept as a bribe to forgo the change. The
Hicks compensation test is from the losers' point of view, while the Kaldor
compensation test is from the gainers' point of view. If both conditions are
satisfied, both gainers and losers will agree that the proposed activity will move
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The basic welfare economics problem is to find the theoretical maximum of a
simultaneously solving seven equations. This simple economy would have only
two consumers (consumer 1 and consumer 2), only two products (product X and
product Y), and only two factors of production going into these products (labour
(L) and capital (K)). The model can be stated as: Maximize social welfare:
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Economic growth is the increase in quantity of the goods and services produced
increase in real gross domestic product, or real GDP (IMF, 2012). Of more
importance is the growth of the ratio of GDP to population (GDP per capita),
which is also called per capita income. An increase in per capita income is
You should note that the primary driving force of economic growth is the
lower the cost of goods, which is called a shift in supply. Kendrick (1961)
estimate showed that three-quarters of increase in U.S. per capita GDP from
1889-1957 was due to increased productivity. Over the 20th century the real
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price of many goods fell by over 90%. Lower prices create an increase in
aggregated demand, but demand for individual goods and services are subject to
the labor force participation rate (Bjork 1999). Other factors include the
Adam Smith wrote The Wealth of Nations. As such, the formation of the
classical growth theory began in the 18th century with the critique of
thinkers such as David Hume and Adam Smith, and the foundation of the
discipline of modern political economy. Adam Smith noted the huge gains in
productivity achieved by the division of labour in the famous example of the pin
factory. David Ricardo argues that trade benefits a country, because if one can
buy an imported good more cheaply, it means there is more profitable work to
be done here. This theory of comparative advantage would be the central basis
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The notion of growth as increased stocks of capital goods was codified as the
According to this view, the role of technological change became crucial, even
Robert Solow (Solow, 1956) and Trevor Swan in the 1950s, was the first
countries use their resources efficiently and that there are diminishing returns to
capital as labour increases. From these two premises, the neoclassical model
creates economic growth, since people can be more productive given more
capital. Second, poor countries with less capital per person grow faster because
each investment in capital produces a higher return than rich countries with
The model also notes that countries can overcome this steady state and continue
depends on the rate of saving, but the rate of output growth should be equal for
any saving rate. In this model, the process by which countries continue growing
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new technology that allows production with fewer resources. Technology
improves, the steady state level of capital increases, and the country invests and
grows.
inspired by the Marshall Plan which was used to revitalize Europe’s economy
after World War II. It assumes that economic growth can only be achieved by
attitudes, especially if these aspects influence the savings rate and investments.
The constraints impeding economic growth are thus considered by this model to
stages of growth model is the most well-known example of the linear stages of
growth model (ibid). Walt W. Rostow identified five stages through which
Traditional society, (2) Preconditions for take-off, (3) Take-off, (4) Drive to
instance Marxism which states that sectors should develop equally. According
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to Rostow’s model, a country needed to follow some rules of development to
reach the take-off: (1) The investment rate of a country needs to be increased to
at least 10% of its GDP, (2) One or two manufacturing sectors with a high rate
sectors.
The Rostow model has serious flaws, of which the most serious are: (1) The
stages which are the same for all countries, a doubtful assumption; (2) The
capita; (3) The model focuses on characteristics of development, but does not
identify the causal factors which lead development to occur. As such, it neglects
growth rate of a country in terms of the savings rate and the productivity of
capital. Heavy state involvement has often been considered necessary for
Rodan, Ragnar Nurkse and Kurt Mandelbaum argued that a big push model in
industrialization, and that the private sector would not be able to provide the
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resources for this on its own (Scribd.com, 2010). Another influential theory of
Bank, 1994).
Because of the focus on the need for investments in capital, the Linear Stages of
Salter Cycle
productivity, which lowers the inputs (labour, capital, material, energy, etc.) for
demand for goods and services, which also results in capital investment to
reductions, which further increases demand, until markets become saturated due
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Growth theory advanced again with theories of economist Paul Romer and
technology in the 1980s. They developed the endogenous growth theory that
and 2007). This model also incorporated a new concept of human capital, the
skills and knowledge that make workers productive. Unlike physical capital,
human capital has increasing rates of return. Therefore, overall there are
constant returns to capital, and economies never reach a steady state. Growth
does not slow as capital accumulates, but the rate of growth depends on the
types of capital a country invests in. Research done in this area has focused on
Unified growth theory was developed by Oded Galor and his co-authors to
the last hundred years. As a consequence, it was not able to explain the
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qualitatively different empirical regularities that characterized the growth
process over longer time horizons in both developed and less developed
economies. Unified growth theories are endogenous growth theories that are
transition from the epoch of Malthusian stagnation that had characterized most
In theories of economic growth, the mechanisms that let growth take place and
its main determinants are abundant. One popular theory in the 1940s, for
example, was that of the Big Push developed by Paul Narcyz Rosenstein-Rodan
(1902-1985), which suggested that countries needed to jump from one stage of
infrastructure and education coupled with private investments would move the
Schumpeterian Growth
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entrepreneurs introduce new products or processes in the hope that they will
Development theories attempt to explain the conditions that are necessary for
theories about how desirable change in society is best achieved. Such theories
find general determinants of growth that could be applied to any instance under
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of the laws or principles which govern growth at all times and in all countries.
Modern theories tend to accept that conditions for growth change over time, and
necessary for long-term physical well-being. The poverty line which follows
from this is the amount of income needed to satisfy those basic needs. The
what a society needs for subsistence, and for poor population groups to rise
above the poverty line. Basic needs theory does not focus on investing in
measure of poverty.
good way to make people active in society so that they can provide labor more
easily and act as consumers and savers (UNESCO, 2006). There have been also
many critics of the basic needs approach. It would lack theoretical rigour,
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practical precision, be in conflict with growth promotion policies, and run the
economy which in the end enjoys self-sustaining growth. This can only be
industrial products is encouraged. The logic of the strategy rests on the Infant
industry argument, which states that young industries initially do not have the
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competitors and thus need to be protected until they are able to compete in the
free market (Jazzapazza, 2011). The ISI strategy is supported by the Prebisch-
Singer thesis, which states that over time, the terms of trade for commodities
that the income elasticity of demand is greater for manufactured goods than that
Structuralists argue that the only way Third World countries can develop is
through action by the State. Third world countries have to push industrialization
and have to reduce their dependency on trade with the First World, and trade
among themselves.
Dependency Theory
shares many of its core ideas. Whereas structuralists did not consider that
ISI was pursued, dependency thinking could allow development with external
links with the developed parts of the globe. However, this kind of development
domestic dynamic in the developing country and thus remains highly vulnerable
to the economic vagaries of the world market. Dependency thinking starts from
the notion that resources flow from the ‘periphery’ of poor and underdeveloped
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the rich states at the expense of the poor states. Contrary to modernization
theory, dependency theory states that not all societies progress through similar
institutions of their own and are the weaker with regard to the world market
economy, while the developed nations have never been in this follower position
that poor nations provide natural resources and cheap labour for developed
nations, without which the developed nations could not have the standard of
living which they enjoy. Also, developed nations will try to maintain this
is not the result of the disintegration of these countries in the world system, but
because of the way in which they are integrated into this system.
In addition to its structuralist roots, dependency theory has much overlap with
Neo-Marxism and World Systems Theory, which is also reflected in the work of
notion of a Third World, claiming that there is only one world which is
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periphery. One of the results of expansion of the world-system is the
Post-development Theory
dominated by the West and is very ethnocentric (Sachs, 1992). The Western
lifestyle may neither be a realistic nor a desirable goal for the world's
scholar, things like notions of poverty are very culturally embedded and can
differ a lot among cultures. The institutes which voice the concern over
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underdevelopment are very Western-oriented, and post-development calls for a
ideas which currently dominate it. According to Arturo Escobar (1995), post-
Neo-Liberalist Theory
Neoliberalism is a term whose usage and definition have changed over time
(Taylor and Gans-Morse, 2009). Since the 1980s, the term has been used
government spending in order to enhance the role of the private sector in the
the United States (Campbell, et al., 2005). The transition of consensus towards
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1970s are seen by some academics as the root of financialization, with the
central planning. The impetus for this development arose from a desire to avoid
repeating the economic failures of the early 1930s, which were mostly blamed
on the economic policy of classical liberalism. In the decades that followed, the
use of the term neoliberal tended to refer to theories at variance with the more
economy under the guidance and rules of a strong state, a model which came to
Sustainable development
the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations
to meet their own needs, (Brundtland Commission, 1983). There exist more
definitions of sustainable development, but they have in common that they all
have to do with the carrying capacity of the earth and its natural systems and the
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Rome, gave huge momentum to the thinking about sustainability (Meadows et
al., 1972). Global warming issues are also problems which are emphasized by
the sustainable development movement. This led to the 1997 Kyoto Accord,
environmental Kuznets curve. The idea behind this curve is that, as an economy
means that as an economy grows, its pollution output increases, but only until it
and more sustainable. This means that a pro-growth, not an anti-growth policy
is needed to solve the environmental problem. But the evidence for the
tend to consume more products when their income increases. Maybe those
the whole the higher consumption negates this effect. There are people like
Julian Simon however who argue that future technological developments will
Human development theory is a theory which uses ideas from different origins,
wants to avoid normative politics and is focused on how social capital and
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instructional capital can be deployed to optimize the overall value of human
capital in an economy.
Amartya Sen and Mahbub ul Haq are the most well-known human development
theorists. The work of Sen is focused on capabilities: what people can do, and
be. It is these capabilities, rather than the income or goods that they receive (as
in the Basic Needs approach), that determine their wellbeing. This core idea
Development Reports. The economic side of Sen's work can best be categorized
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