In
Readings in Social Welfare: Theory and Policy, Robert E. Kuenne packages postwar classics with contemporary discussions to examine the impact of social welfare theory on policy development. The book introduces students to frameworks developed by scholars to monitor the market's inefficiencies, to modify its income distribution and resource allocation, and to make decisions for social investment.
The readings cover practical issues of national and international concern, such as income and wealth distribution, the measurement of social welfare, recent movements in government regulation theory and practice, the economics of drug prohibition, and the role of the public's risk aversion in the determination of public investment.
This book and its complement, Readings in Applied Microeconomic Theory: Market Forces and Solutions, are part of the Blackwell Readings for Contemporary Economics series.
List of Authors.
Preface.
Acknowledgments.
PART I. THE DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH: STATIC AND LIFE CYCLE VIEWS.
Introduction.
1. Recent Trends in the Size Distribution of Household Wealth (Edward N. Wolff).
2. The Missing Piece in Policy Analysis: Social Security Reform (Martin Feldstein).
PART II. SOCIAL JUDGMENTS AND MEASUREMENTS.
Introduction.
3. The General Theory of Second Best (R. G. Lipsey and Kelvin Lancaster).
4. An Economic Theory of Clubs (James M. Buchanan).
5. Consumer’s Surplus Without Apology (Robert D. Willig).
6. The Social Costs of Monopoly Power (Keith Cowling and Dennis C. Mueller).
7. Rationality and Social Choice (Amartya Sen).
PART III. WHEN MARKETS FAlÓ"