ACL-1International audienceWe investigate the problem of how to perform comparisons of income distributions across families of different sizes. We argue that social welfare ought to be computed as the average individual utility instead of the average household utility as in most known criteria. We provide dominance criteria which allow for some indeterminacy about the average optimal family size, by resorting to the bounded approach to dominance analysis proposed by Fleurbaey et al. (2003). Indeed, when differences in needs come from family size, a specific population allocation problem (how a population should be optimally divided over families for given resources) adds to the usual income allocation problem. Pro-family and anti-family sta...
Some analysts use sequential dominance criteria, and others use equivalence scales in combination wi...
The paper examines income distributions of a finite population consisting of households which may di...
Shorrocks suggested a broad welfare dominance relationship using the properties of Pigou-Dalton and ...
ACL-1International audienceWe investigate the problem of how to perform comparisons of income distri...
The paper considers the problem of comparing income distributions for heterogeneous populations. The...
Do family size equivalence scales have a welfare interpretation? Whilst many economists routinely us...
Comparisons of Heterogeneous Distributions and dominance Criteria by Patrick Moyes This paper look...
This paper establishes the principles which should govern the welfare and inequality analysis of het...
This paper is another contribution to the vast literature which addresses this issue: comparison of ...
Tableau d'honneur de la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales, 2011-2012L’objectif princi...
This thesis examines three questions concerned with the relative income needs of familiesof differen...
In this report... Researchers use income distribution to measure the economic well-being of the pop...
Consider an income distribution among households of the same size in which in-dividuals, equally nee...
Ebert (1999) proposed evaluating social welfare using an equivalence scale as weights for income uni...
To take into account heterogeneity in a social welfare function, Ebert (1997) and Shorrocks (1995) s...
Some analysts use sequential dominance criteria, and others use equivalence scales in combination wi...
The paper examines income distributions of a finite population consisting of households which may di...
Shorrocks suggested a broad welfare dominance relationship using the properties of Pigou-Dalton and ...
ACL-1International audienceWe investigate the problem of how to perform comparisons of income distri...
The paper considers the problem of comparing income distributions for heterogeneous populations. The...
Do family size equivalence scales have a welfare interpretation? Whilst many economists routinely us...
Comparisons of Heterogeneous Distributions and dominance Criteria by Patrick Moyes This paper look...
This paper establishes the principles which should govern the welfare and inequality analysis of het...
This paper is another contribution to the vast literature which addresses this issue: comparison of ...
Tableau d'honneur de la Faculté des études supérieures et postdoctorales, 2011-2012L’objectif princi...
This thesis examines three questions concerned with the relative income needs of familiesof differen...
In this report... Researchers use income distribution to measure the economic well-being of the pop...
Consider an income distribution among households of the same size in which in-dividuals, equally nee...
Ebert (1999) proposed evaluating social welfare using an equivalence scale as weights for income uni...
To take into account heterogeneity in a social welfare function, Ebert (1997) and Shorrocks (1995) s...
Some analysts use sequential dominance criteria, and others use equivalence scales in combination wi...
The paper examines income distributions of a finite population consisting of households which may di...
Shorrocks suggested a broad welfare dominance relationship using the properties of Pigou-Dalton and ...