Comparisons of Heterogeneous Distributions and dominance Criteria by Patrick Moyes This paper looks at standard-of-living comparisons when observations of both income and household structure are available. We generalise the Atkinson and Bourguignon approach (1987) in the case where marginal distributions of needs can vary across the household populations studied. We assume that considerate planners use a utilitarian social welfare function to rank heterogeneous income distributions. Insofar as any individual can play the role of planner, we take the unanimist point of view that the planner's judgements have to comply with a certain number of basic normative principles. We impose increasingly restrictive conditions on the household's utili...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
The paper examines income distributions of a finite population consisting of households which may di...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
Comparisons of Heterogeneous Distributions and dominance Criteria by Patrick Moyes This paper look...
The paper considers the problem of comparing income distributions for heterogeneous populations. The...
When is one distribution (of income, consumption, or some other economic variable) more equal or bet...
ACL-1International audienceWe investigate the problem of how to perform comparisons of income distri...
This paper establishes the principles which should govern the welfare and inequality analysis of het...
Some analysts use sequential dominance criteria, and others use equivalence scales in combination wi...
Second-degree dominance has become a widely accepted criterion for ordering distribution functions a...
This paper establishes an equivalence between three incomplete rankings of distributions of income a...
Shorrocks suggested a broad welfare dominance relationship using the properties of Pigou-Dalton and ...
Tableau d'honneur de la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales, 2011-2012L’objectif princi...
Abstract Some analysts use sequential dominance criteria, and others use equivalence scales in combi...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
The paper examines income distributions of a finite population consisting of households which may di...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
Comparisons of Heterogeneous Distributions and dominance Criteria by Patrick Moyes This paper look...
The paper considers the problem of comparing income distributions for heterogeneous populations. The...
When is one distribution (of income, consumption, or some other economic variable) more equal or bet...
ACL-1International audienceWe investigate the problem of how to perform comparisons of income distri...
This paper establishes the principles which should govern the welfare and inequality analysis of het...
Some analysts use sequential dominance criteria, and others use equivalence scales in combination wi...
Second-degree dominance has become a widely accepted criterion for ordering distribution functions a...
This paper establishes an equivalence between three incomplete rankings of distributions of income a...
Shorrocks suggested a broad welfare dominance relationship using the properties of Pigou-Dalton and ...
Tableau d'honneur de la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales, 2011-2012L’objectif princi...
Abstract Some analysts use sequential dominance criteria, and others use equivalence scales in combi...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
The paper examines income distributions of a finite population consisting of households which may di...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...