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Social experimentation is a tool that enables economists and policy
makers to test proposed economic policies in the real world.
Instead of testing policies by analytical methods or by laboratory
simulation, the policies are tested on people who would be affected
were these policies implemented. The authors describe how such
social experiments are set up and carried out, and consider the
advantages and disadvantages of social experimentation relative to
other means of evaluating economic and social policies. The main
part of the book is a review and a critical evaluation of the
principal social experiments in economics that have been carried
out in the United States, where this method has been used most
extensively. The authors examine in detail the first large-scale
experiment in the United States (the New Jersey Income Maintenance
Experiment) and subsequent experiments with the labour force,
electricity rates, and cash housing allowances. A consideration of
the social utility of social experimentation follows, and the book
closes with a set of recommendations on the conditions under which
social experimentation might best be used in evaluating economic
and social policies.
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