We investigate the situation where there is interest in ranking distributions (of income, of wealth, of health, of service levels) across a population, in which individuals are considered preferentially indistinguishable and where there is some limited information about social pref- erences. We use a natural dominance relation, generalized Lorenz dominance, used in welfare comparisons in economic theory. In some settings there may be additional information about preferences (for example, if there is policy statement that one distribution is preferred to an- other) and any dominance relation should respect such preferences. However, characterising this sort of conditional dominance relation (specifically, dominance with respect to the set of...
Multidimensional welfare analysis has recently been revived by money-metric measures based on explic...
A number of competing social preference models have been developed inspired by the evidence from eco...
When is one distribution (of income, consumption, or some other economic variable) more equal or bet...
We investigate the situation where there is interest in ranking distributions (of income, of wealth,...
We propose a straightforward dominance procedure for comparing social welfare orderings (swos) with ...
Abstract We propose a straightforward dominance procedure for comparing social welfare orderings (SW...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
This paper introduces a model of inequality aversion that captures a preference for equality of ex-a...
We study the problem of defining inequality-averse social orderings over the space of allocations in...
Distributional dominance criteria are commonly applied to draw welfare inferences about comparisons,...
We study distributional preferences in larger “societies”. We conduct experiments via Mechanical Tur...
© The Author(s) 2010. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.comThis paper is co...
Distributional dominance criteria are commonly applied to draw welfare inferences about comparisons,...
Using a choice-experiment in the lab, we look at preferences over pairs of income distributions with...
We present simple one-shot distribution experiments comparing the relative impor-tance of efficiency...
Multidimensional welfare analysis has recently been revived by money-metric measures based on explic...
A number of competing social preference models have been developed inspired by the evidence from eco...
When is one distribution (of income, consumption, or some other economic variable) more equal or bet...
We investigate the situation where there is interest in ranking distributions (of income, of wealth,...
We propose a straightforward dominance procedure for comparing social welfare orderings (swos) with ...
Abstract We propose a straightforward dominance procedure for comparing social welfare orderings (SW...
The incompatibility between the Pareto indifference criterion and a concern for greater equality in ...
This paper introduces a model of inequality aversion that captures a preference for equality of ex-a...
We study the problem of defining inequality-averse social orderings over the space of allocations in...
Distributional dominance criteria are commonly applied to draw welfare inferences about comparisons,...
We study distributional preferences in larger “societies”. We conduct experiments via Mechanical Tur...
© The Author(s) 2010. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.comThis paper is co...
Distributional dominance criteria are commonly applied to draw welfare inferences about comparisons,...
Using a choice-experiment in the lab, we look at preferences over pairs of income distributions with...
We present simple one-shot distribution experiments comparing the relative impor-tance of efficiency...
Multidimensional welfare analysis has recently been revived by money-metric measures based on explic...
A number of competing social preference models have been developed inspired by the evidence from eco...
When is one distribution (of income, consumption, or some other economic variable) more equal or bet...