We show that the Hicksian welfare measures of compensating variation and equivalent variation coincide if one of them is evaluated at a compensated income. The measures are nondecreasing in income if the varied attribute and income are complementary, and indirect utility is concave in income. Income monotonicity implies the normative endowment effect, where the equivalent variation exceeds the compensating variation. We provide sufficient conditions for the normative endowment effect and discuss empirical implications. In the global absence of a strict (anti-) endowment effect, both Hicksian welfare measures must be independent of income and the indirect utility function additively separable in income
An inescapable conclusion to be drawn from the literature on the measurement of welfare is that the ...
Measuring preferences via stated methods remains the only technique to obtain the total economic val...
This article investigates the properties, good and bad, of social evaluations based on four money me...
A.E. Res. 91-10A problem persists in measuring the welfare effects of simultaneous price and income ...
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Review of ...
I present a simple and precise relationship between the willingness-to-pay and the willingness-to-ac...
A problem persists in measuring the welfare effects of simultaneous price and income changes because...
across individuals or homogenous groups to give an overall measure of the desirability of a given po...
Economists use the standard rational model to predict behavior after a policy change and to determin...
Hicksian welfare theory is static in nature, but many decisions are made in a dynamic environment. W...
Graduation date: 1986Although the limitations of consumer surplus have become widely known, there ex...
We investigate under which conditions the sign of the sum of both the individual compensating and eq...
We stablish a general relationship between the standard form of the individualistic social-welfare f...
Small and Rosen’s (Econometrica 49(1):105–130, 1981) method for measuring consumer surplus using dis...
Measuring preferences via stated methods remains the only technique to obtain the total economic val...
An inescapable conclusion to be drawn from the literature on the measurement of welfare is that the ...
Measuring preferences via stated methods remains the only technique to obtain the total economic val...
This article investigates the properties, good and bad, of social evaluations based on four money me...
A.E. Res. 91-10A problem persists in measuring the welfare effects of simultaneous price and income ...
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Review of ...
I present a simple and precise relationship between the willingness-to-pay and the willingness-to-ac...
A problem persists in measuring the welfare effects of simultaneous price and income changes because...
across individuals or homogenous groups to give an overall measure of the desirability of a given po...
Economists use the standard rational model to predict behavior after a policy change and to determin...
Hicksian welfare theory is static in nature, but many decisions are made in a dynamic environment. W...
Graduation date: 1986Although the limitations of consumer surplus have become widely known, there ex...
We investigate under which conditions the sign of the sum of both the individual compensating and eq...
We stablish a general relationship between the standard form of the individualistic social-welfare f...
Small and Rosen’s (Econometrica 49(1):105–130, 1981) method for measuring consumer surplus using dis...
Measuring preferences via stated methods remains the only technique to obtain the total economic val...
An inescapable conclusion to be drawn from the literature on the measurement of welfare is that the ...
Measuring preferences via stated methods remains the only technique to obtain the total economic val...
This article investigates the properties, good and bad, of social evaluations based on four money me...