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Hans-Werner Sinn, Munich, West Germany This book contains 15 papers
presented at a conference in Neresheim, West Ger many, in June
1986. The articles were selected by anonymous referees and most of
them have undergone substantial revisions since their presentation.
The common topic is measurement of welfare, both from efficiency
and from equity perspectives. For many economists, welfare is a
diffuse, arbitrary and am biguous concept. The papers collected in
this book show that this view is not justified. Though not beyond
all doubt, welfare theory today is crisp and clear, offering fairly
straightforward measuring concepts. It even comes up with numbers
that measure society's advantage or disadvantage from specific
policy options in monetary units. Politicians get something they
can intuitively understand and argue with, and they do not have to
be afraid that all this is metaphysics or the result of the
scientist's personal value judgements. Some economists, whom I
would classify as belonging to the "everything is optimal" school,
would claim that providing politicians with numerical welfare
measures is superfluous or even dangerous. The world is as it is,
and any attempt to give policy advice can only make things worse. I
do not share this view. There are good policies and there are bad
ones, but it may not be easy to distinguish between them. There is
a role for consulting politicians, Dr."
Serious research into the causes and implications of an aging
population is a relatively recent phenomenon. Though several
relevant issues of aging havereceived considerable attention in
public and political discussions (especially in European countries
and in Japan), the economics profession is somewhat lacking behind.
This is particularly true for thetheoretical underpinnings of the
economics of population aging. Until now, the aging-debate is
primarily led by institutionalists. The present book with its
analytical and econometric studies on fiscal implications of
population aging is an important step in the process of theoretical
analysis of aging. It is of interest both for population economists
(and demographers) and for public economists - providing a bridge
between these areas of research.
The trend towards privatization has been particularly strong in the
1980s and 1990s. In the UK, some of the most important public
utilities such as telecommunications, gas, and electricity have
been privatized. Following unification, Germany is having to
privatize an entire economy. This book examines the form of
privatization, a topic which has not previously been subjected to
rigorous economic analysis, and provides a comprehensive and
thorough survey of arguments both for and against it. Both positive
and welfare-economic approaches to deal with the complex problems
of the transition from public to private ownership are discussed.
The author also examines the central issues of privatization such
as why efficiency increases can be expected as a result of
privatization, whether full privatization coupled with subsequent
regulation is better than partial privatization with the government
regulating from within the firm. He also looks at the role of trade
unions in the privatization process.
This volume presents papers which were given at a conference of the
Liberty Fund, Washington, co-sponsored by the Carl-Menger
Institute, Vienna. The conference took place in Vienna in January
1988. All papers were subject to a refereeing process; some of them
had to be revised very extensively. The economics of progressive
taxation have been a research topic ever since economists have
dealt with the economic role of the state. Old puzzles are the
best: the theoretical underpinning of progressivity still is not
fully convincing, even after 200 years of economic research. In the
present volume we succeeded in publishing some contributions of
outstanding economists which present their visions of the topic.
Niskanen distinguishes two types of contributions of public choice
analysis to understanding and evaluating the tax and transfer
system in modern economics: the positive analysis, which examines
the issue of how a tax and transfer system would look if it were
established by a government subject to majority rule; . and the
normative analysis, which tries to discern an optimal system of
taxes and transfers. In the normative case the author distinguishes
between the "libertarian perspective", in which each person has
full rights to any property that he has acquired legally and in
which transfers are determined entirely by the preferences of the
donors, and the so-called "constitutional perspective" , in which
each person elects the rules affecting taxes without knowledge of
his position in the post constitutional distribution.
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