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9780521466967

Thinking about Inequality: Personal Judgment and Income Distributions

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  • ISBN13:

    9780521466967

  • ISBN10:

    0521466962

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2000-01-28
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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Summary

What is inequality? In recent years there has been an explosion of interest in the subject that has yielded a substantial body of formal tools and results for income-distribution analysis. Nearly all of this is founded on a small set of core assumptions - such as the Principle of Transfers, scale independence, the population principle'^' - that are used to give meaning to specific concepts of inequality measurement, inequality ranking and, indeed, to inequality itself. But does the standard axiomatic structure coincide with public perceptions of inequality? Or is the economist's concept of inequality a thing apart, perpetuated through serial brainwashing in the way the subject is studied and taught? Amiel and Cowell examine the evidence from a large international questionnaire experiment using student respondents. Along with basic 'cake-sharing' issues, related questions involving social-welfare rankings, the relationship between inequality and overall income growth and the meaning of poverty comparisons are considered.

Table of Contents

List of figures
viii
List of tables
x
Preface xiii
Introduction
1(7)
A look at inequality analysis
1(2)
A second look
3(3)
A guide to the book
6(2)
What is inequality? The economists' view
8(10)
The axiomatic approach
8(1)
Inequality rankings and orderings
9(2)
The transfer principle
11(1)
Income and population
12(3)
Decomposability
15(2)
Summary
17(1)
An investigative strategy
18(13)
What are we investigating?
18(3)
Experiments
21(2)
Questions
23(1)
A new approach
24(3)
Implementing the approach
27(3)
Summary
30(1)
What is inequality? The students' view
31(18)
Drawing an inequality map
31(1)
An introduction to the questionnaires
32(3)
Inequality and changes in income and population
35(3)
Transfers and the structure of inequality comparisons
38(4)
Do the answers make sense?
42(3)
More on the transfer principle
45(4)
Income and welfare
49(20)
What is welfare?
49(1)
Social welfare
50(7)
Empirical results
57(9)
Summary: welfare judgments and inequality comparisons
66(3)
Income change
69(20)
Introduction: comparing cakes
69(2)
Uniform enrichment
71(4)
The dependence hypothesis
75(3)
Unbalanced enrichment
78(8)
Policy appraisal
86(3)
Poverty
89(25)
Introduction
89(1)
What does `poverty' mean?
89(5)
The poverty questionnaires
94(2)
Income distributions and poverty
96(15)
Conclusions: the approach to poverty comparisons
111(3)
A cross-cultural perspective
114(13)
Introduction
114(2)
A statistical approach
116(1)
Principles of distributional judgments
117(5)
Direct and indirect approaches to inequality
122(1)
Does economics matter?
123(3)
An appraisal
126(1)
Thinking again about inequality
127(9)
Second thoughts about second thoughts
127(1)
Applying inequality judgments
128(2)
Where next?
130(3)
A final word
133(3)
Appendix A Inequality analysis: a summary of concepts and results 136(7)
A.1 The axiomatic approach
136(3)
A.2 Inequality and welfare rankings
139(1)
A.3 Poverty comparisons
140(3)
Appendix B The questionnaires 143(30)
References 173(5)
Index 178

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