We provide a microfoundation for a weighted utilitarian social welfare function that reflects common moral intuitions about interpersonal comparisons of utilities. If utility is only ordinal in the usual microeconomic sense, interpersonal comparisons are meaningless. Nonetheless, economics often adopt utilitarian welfare functions, assuming that comparable utility functions can be calibrated, using information beyond consumer choice data. We show that consumer choice data alone are sufficient. As suggested by Edgeworth (1881), just noticeable differences (JNDs) provide a common unit of measure for interpersonal comparisons of utility differences. We prove that a simple monotonicity axiom implies a weighted utilitarian aggregation of prefere...
This book-length chapter draws technical and philosophical connections between utility theory and so...
Multidimensional welfare analysis has recently been revived by money-metric measures based on explic...
I examine the once popular claim according to which interpersonal comparisons of welfare are necessa...
We provide a microfoundation for a weighted utilitarian social welfare function that reflects common...
We consider the aggregation of individual agents ’ von Neumann-Morgenstern’s util-ity functions into...
We show that, in a sufficiently large population satisfying certain statistical regularities, it is ...
This paper develops and explores a new framework for theorizing about the measurement and aggregatio...
While interpersonal utility comparisons are indispensable to the determination of utility maxima, th...
We characterize anonymous utilitarianism in a multi-profile and purely ordinal framework, i.e. witho...
In most applied cost-benefit analyses, individual willingness to pay is aggregated without using exp...
On the orthodox view in economics, interpersonal comparisons of utility are not empirically meaningf...
Extensive measurement is the standard measurement-theoretic approach for constructing a ratio scale....
When individuals’ utility is a convex combination of their income and their concern at having a low ...
Some social choice models assume that precise interpersonal comparisons of utility (either ordinal o...
This paper investigates the possibilities for satisfaction of both the ex-ante and ex-post Pareto pr...
This book-length chapter draws technical and philosophical connections between utility theory and so...
Multidimensional welfare analysis has recently been revived by money-metric measures based on explic...
I examine the once popular claim according to which interpersonal comparisons of welfare are necessa...
We provide a microfoundation for a weighted utilitarian social welfare function that reflects common...
We consider the aggregation of individual agents ’ von Neumann-Morgenstern’s util-ity functions into...
We show that, in a sufficiently large population satisfying certain statistical regularities, it is ...
This paper develops and explores a new framework for theorizing about the measurement and aggregatio...
While interpersonal utility comparisons are indispensable to the determination of utility maxima, th...
We characterize anonymous utilitarianism in a multi-profile and purely ordinal framework, i.e. witho...
In most applied cost-benefit analyses, individual willingness to pay is aggregated without using exp...
On the orthodox view in economics, interpersonal comparisons of utility are not empirically meaningf...
Extensive measurement is the standard measurement-theoretic approach for constructing a ratio scale....
When individuals’ utility is a convex combination of their income and their concern at having a low ...
Some social choice models assume that precise interpersonal comparisons of utility (either ordinal o...
This paper investigates the possibilities for satisfaction of both the ex-ante and ex-post Pareto pr...
This book-length chapter draws technical and philosophical connections between utility theory and so...
Multidimensional welfare analysis has recently been revived by money-metric measures based on explic...
I examine the once popular claim according to which interpersonal comparisons of welfare are necessa...