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The Economics of Welfare David Rich

The Economics of Welfare By David Rich

The Economics of Welfare by David Rich


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Summary

Scholars and students of both economics and public policy will find Rich's work a significant contribution to contemporary debates on welfare policy directions.

Divided into four parts, the volume begins by redefining the problem of welfare economics.

The Economics of Welfare Summary

The Economics of Welfare: A Contemporary Analysis by David Rich

Building on his earlier Praeger work, Contemporary Economics, Rich here examines current and historical, theoretical and practical, notions of welfare economics. Through an in-depth discussion of the theories of Edgeworth, Pareto, and Slutsky, the author analyzes how the present approach to welfare economics developed and how it has failed in significant ways to alleviate the problems of poverty and unemployment. Rich then develops a new theory of welfare economics based on the concept of dynamic disequilibrium and designed to respond to present-day economic and social realities. Scholars and students of both economics and public policy will find Rich's work a significant contribution to contemporary debates on welfare policy directions.

Divided into four parts, the volume begins by redefining the problem of welfare economics. In contrast to those who see the problem as simply the redistribution of income, Rich argues that the challenge today is to use our present economic system to absorb welfare recipients and make them productive members of the economy. He argues further that current approaches to the welfare situation are Keynesian and therefore relevant to a different era--that of the Great Depression. In subsequent chapters, Rich develops his theory of contemporary welfare economics, utilizing a welfare utility function and incorporating the components of government, industry, and labor. Designed to make the economy more efficient without the redistribution of income, Rich's proposals include making welfare payments contingent upon training and applying training to the needs of the business sector. Only by employing a theory more rooted in contemporary realities, Rich argues, can we ultimately remove the heavy burden of welfare so detrimental to large segments of society.

About David Rich

DAVID Z. RICH is Research Assistant in Economics at Tel Aviv University. His previous works include The Dynamics of Knowledge (Greenwood, 1988) and Contemporary Economics (Praeger, 1986).

Table of Contents

The Problem Situation On the Nature of this Work General Comments on the Modern Economy Edgeworth and Pareto: The Neoclassical Foundations of Welfare Economics Slutsky's Substitution Effect: The Neoclassical Transition The Theory of Contemporary Welfare Economics Introductory Discussion The Utility Optimum The Economy in Disequilibrium Economic Welfare and Dynamic Disequilibrium Preliminary Remarks The Welfare Utility Function The Welfare Utility Function and the Business Cycle The Welfare Utility Function and Dynamic Disequilibrium The Welfare Utility Function and its Global Consequences Welfare in the Developed Economy On International Trade Welfare in the Developing and Emerging Economies Concluding Remarks Selected Bibliography Index

Additional information

NPB9780275933098
9780275933098
0275933091
The Economics of Welfare: A Contemporary Analysis by David Rich
New
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
1989-12-08
212
N/A
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