In this paper we present an applied welfare analysis in the tradition of Harberger that confronts the notable exceptions to the appropriate use of a single market measure for general equilibrium welfare analysis. We bring together the results of several elaborative studies on Harberger's 1971 essay and present some empirical remedies that address the notable exceptions to the appropriate use of estimates made in a single market. A case study involving a U.S. antidumping suit against Canadian exports of potash is presented. Copyright 1996, Oxford University Press.
An inescapable conclusion to be drawn from the literature on the measurement of welfare is that the ...
This paper explores the sensitivity of multiplier estimates under three alternative assump-tions abo...
This article tests the Protection for Sale (PFS) model using detailed data from U.S. food processing...
General equilibrium demand and supply curves can be used to measure the multiple market effects of i...
Harberger's methodology for the measurement of deadweight loss is reformulated in a general equilibr...
Although the limitations of consumer surplus have become widely known, there exists a lack of studie...
Graduation date: 1986Although the limitations of consumer surplus have become widely known, there ex...
Arnold Harberger, in a seminal 1954 paper, was the first to estimate empirically the deadweight soci...
A model of international trade that permits market imperfections from either exporters or importers ...
The paper constructs a general equilibrium environment where firms find it profitable to set low pri...
The dairy industry in the United States has been the recipient of numerous price support programs. U...
The most widespread measure of individual welfare is consumer surplus (cs). If consumer surplus is t...
Wide currency has been gained in recent years by the so-called "triangles method" for estimating the...
We study the percentage of welfare losses (PWL) yielded by imperfect competition under product diffe...
This paper reviews theory for measuring welfare changes for a single consumer.1 The first section de...
An inescapable conclusion to be drawn from the literature on the measurement of welfare is that the ...
This paper explores the sensitivity of multiplier estimates under three alternative assump-tions abo...
This article tests the Protection for Sale (PFS) model using detailed data from U.S. food processing...
General equilibrium demand and supply curves can be used to measure the multiple market effects of i...
Harberger's methodology for the measurement of deadweight loss is reformulated in a general equilibr...
Although the limitations of consumer surplus have become widely known, there exists a lack of studie...
Graduation date: 1986Although the limitations of consumer surplus have become widely known, there ex...
Arnold Harberger, in a seminal 1954 paper, was the first to estimate empirically the deadweight soci...
A model of international trade that permits market imperfections from either exporters or importers ...
The paper constructs a general equilibrium environment where firms find it profitable to set low pri...
The dairy industry in the United States has been the recipient of numerous price support programs. U...
The most widespread measure of individual welfare is consumer surplus (cs). If consumer surplus is t...
Wide currency has been gained in recent years by the so-called "triangles method" for estimating the...
We study the percentage of welfare losses (PWL) yielded by imperfect competition under product diffe...
This paper reviews theory for measuring welfare changes for a single consumer.1 The first section de...
An inescapable conclusion to be drawn from the literature on the measurement of welfare is that the ...
This paper explores the sensitivity of multiplier estimates under three alternative assump-tions abo...
This article tests the Protection for Sale (PFS) model using detailed data from U.S. food processing...