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Measuring Economic Welfare
New Methods

Professor McKenzie proposes and formulates a method composed of operational procedures designed to facilitate the evaluation of economic projects and policies.

George W. McKenzie (Author)

9780521248624, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 10 March 1983

200 pages
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.38 kg

Professor McKenzie proposes and formulates a method composed of operational procedures designed to facilitate the evaluation of economic projects and policies. This method is discussed fully, illustrated by simple examples, and compared with alternative procedures. An outline of a computer program that enables readers to undertake their own calculations is included. In order to present the approach clearly, the author provides an exposition of the fundamental ideas and the main alternative approaches to the problem. These rely on various forms of index numbers and consumer surplus. However, as is well known, such measures are not capable of correctly ordering the various alternatives under consideration, except under highly unrealist assumptions. In this book the author suggests the abandonment of this traditional approach based on the concept of 'willingness-to-pay' or the conpensating variation. Instead, the measure that Samuelson has called the 'money-metric' should become the cornerstone of applied welfare economics.

Preface
1. An introduction to the money-metric
2. The marginal utility of money as an integrating factor
3. Calculation of the money-metric
4. The approach of Dupuit and Marshall
5. The Hicksian approach
6. Approximations based on consumer surplus
7. A reconsideration of the theory of index numbers
8. The money-metric as a basis for calculation of social welfare functions
9. Measurement of the social costs of monopoly
10. A final comment and conclusion
References
Index.

Subject Areas: Economic theory & philosophy [KCA]

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