Welfare economics
Economics is both a positive science and a normative science. Economics as a positive science studies how markets and economies work, regardless of whether or not those institutions produce a desirable result. Welfare economics is the normative study of the types of outcomes that an economic system should be producing, and whether or not those outcomes are being produced.[1]
The problem of interpersonal utility comparisons
Welfare economics addresses the issue of interpersonal utility comparisons by using observations about consumption as a vector of choices rather than a utilitarian summation of the utility they derive from a particular consumption bundle. When making comparisons between more than one individual, a particular allocation of resources is pareto-optimal if you could not make one individual better off without making another person worse off.
Fundamental theorems of welfare economics
In a market mechanism with flexible prices, individuals will continue to trade with each other until they reach an optimal outcome. The market provides a mechanism for individuals to communicate their preferences through prices so that each individual will be able to an optimal bundle of consumption given a particular budget constraint.
First theorem of Welfare Economics
In a market with many traders where prices are flexible, any equilibrium will be pareto-optimal.
Second theorem of Welfare Economics
Every outcome that is pareto-optimal can be realized in a market with many traders and flexible prices provided an appropriate initial distribution of endowments.
References
- ↑ Hirshleifer, J and Hirshleifer, D (1997) Price Theory and Applications ISBN 0131907786