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This book explores the foundations and potential of a theory of
need-based distributive justice, supported by experimental
evidence. The core idea is that need-based distributive justice may
have some legitimatory advantages over other important principles
of distribution, like equality and equity, and therefore involves
less dispute over the distribution and redistribution of scarce
resources. In seven chapters, eleven scholars from the fields of
philosophy, psychology, sociology, political science and economics
outline the normative and positive building blocks of such a theory
by critically reviewing the literature on distributive justice from
their respective disciplinary perspectives. They address important
theoretical and practical issues concerning the rationality of
needs identification at the individual level and the recognition of
needs at the societal level. They also investigate whether and how
the dynamics of distribution procedures that allocate resources
according to the need principle leads to social stability, focusing
on the economic incentives that arise from need-based
redistribution. The final chapter provides a synthesis and outlines
a framework for a theory of justice based on ten hypotheses derived
from the insights presented.
This is the first book that performs international and
intertemporal comparisons of uniform tax progression with empirical
data. While conventional measures of tax progression suffer from
serious disadvantages for empirical analyses, this book extends
uniform measures to progression comparisons of countries with
different income distributions. Tax progression is analyzed in
terms of Lorenz curve and Suits curve equivalents of net incomes
and taxes. The authors derive six distinct definitions of the
relation "is more progressive than", which are then utilized for an
empirical analysis of 13 countries included in the Luxembourg
Income Study (LIS). In two thirds of all international comparisons
of tax progression, the authors report a clear ranking of the
respective countries in terms of progression dominance. Tax based
definitions of greater progressivity perform best. These
observations are yet reinforced by statistical tests. The book also
provides an account of the institutional background of the involved
countries in order to facilitate the interpretation of the data.
Moreover, the authors conduct intertemporal comparisons of tax
progression for selected countries and perform a sensitivity
analysis with respect to the parameterization of the equivalence
scale.
This Festschrift in honor ofChristian Seidl combines a group of
prominent authors who are experts in areas like public economics,
welfare economic, decision theory, and experimental economics in a
unique volume. Christian Seidl who has edited together with
Salvador Barber a and Peter Hammond the Handbook of Utility Theory
(appearing at Kluwer Academic Publishers/Springer Economics), has
dedicated most of his research to utility and decision theory,
social choice theory, welfare economics, and public economics.
During the last decade, he has turned part of his attention to a
research tool that is increasingly gaining in importance in
economics: the laboratory experiment. This volume is an attempt to
illuminate all facets of Christian Seidl's ambitious research
agenda by presenting a collection of both theoretical and expe-
mental papers on Utility, Choice, andWelfare written by his closest
friends, former students, and much valued colleagues. Christian
Seidl was born on August 5, 1940, in Vienna, Austria. Beginning
Winter term 1962/63, he studied Economics and Business
Administration at the Vienna School of Economics (then "Hochschule
fff] ur ] Welthandel"). 1966 he was awarded an MBA by the Vienna
School of Economics and 1969 a doctoral degree in Economics. In
October 1968 Christian became a research assistant at the Institute
of Economics at the University of Vienna. 1973 he acquired his
habilitation (right to teach) in Economics - supervised by Wilhelm
Weber - from the Department of Law and Economics of the University
of Vienna. He was awarded the Dr."
This book explores the foundations and potential of a theory of
need-based distributive justice, supported by experimental
evidence. The core idea is that need-based distributive justice may
have some legitimatory advantages over other important principles
of distribution, like equality and equity, and therefore involves
less dispute over the distribution and redistribution of scarce
resources. In seven chapters, eleven scholars from the fields of
philosophy, psychology, sociology, political science and economics
outline the normative and positive building blocks of such a theory
by critically reviewing the literature on distributive justice from
their respective disciplinary perspectives. They address important
theoretical and practical issues concerning the rationality of
needs identification at the individual level and the recognition of
needs at the societal level. They also investigate whether and how
the dynamics of distribution procedures that allocate resources
according to the need principle leads to social stability, focusing
on the economic incentives that arise from need-based
redistribution. The final chapter provides a synthesis and outlines
a framework for a theory of justice based on ten hypotheses derived
from the insights presented.
This is the first book that performs international and
intertemporal comparisons of uniform tax progression with empirical
data. While conventional measures of tax progression suffer from
serious disadvantages for empirical analyses, this book extends
uniform measures to progression comparisons of countries with
different income distributions. Tax progression is analyzed in
terms of Lorenz curve and Suits curve equivalents of net incomes
and taxes. The authors derive six distinct definitions of the
relation "is more progressive than", which are then utilized for an
empirical analysis of 13 countries included in the Luxembourg
Income Study (LIS). In two thirds of all international comparisons
of tax progression, the authors report a clear ranking of the
respective countries in terms of progression dominance. Tax based
definitions of greater progressivity perform best. These
observations are yet reinforced by statistical tests. The book also
provides an account of the institutional background of the involved
countries in order to facilitate the interpretation of the data.
Moreover, the authors conduct intertemporal comparisons of tax
progression for selected countries and perform a sensitivity
analysis with respect to the parameterization of the equivalence
scale.
This Festschrift in honor ofChristian Seidl combines a group of
prominent authors who are experts in areas like public economics,
welfare economic, decision theory, and experimental economics in a
unique volume. Christian Seidl who has edited together with
Salvador Barber a and Peter Hammond the Handbook of Utility Theory
(appearing at Kluwer Academic Publishers/Springer Economics), has
dedicated most of his research to utility and decision theory,
social choice theory, welfare economics, and public economics.
During the last decade, he has turned part of his attention to a
research tool that is increasingly gaining in importance in
economics: the laboratory experiment. This volume is an attempt to
illuminate all facets of Christian Seidl's ambitious research
agenda by presenting a collection of both theoretical and expe-
mental papers on Utility, Choice, andWelfare written by his closest
friends, former students, and much valued colleagues. Christian
Seidl was born on August 5, 1940, in Vienna, Austria. Beginning
Winter term 1962/63, he studied Economics and Business
Administration at the Vienna School of Economics (then "Hochschule
fff] ur ] Welthandel"). 1966 he was awarded an MBA by the Vienna
School of Economics and 1969 a doctoral degree in Economics. In
October 1968 Christian became a research assistant at the Institute
of Economics at the University of Vienna. 1973 he acquired his
habilitation (right to teach) in Economics - supervised by Wilhelm
Weber - from the Department of Law and Economics of the University
of Vienna. He was awarded the Dr."
On October 24th, 1994, the pro-government German newspaper 'Die
Welt' reported that the Minister of Family Affairs, Mrs. Hannelore
Ransch, member of the ruling Christian Democratic Union (CD U),
withdrew her candidacy for a second term after serving a four year
term. While Chancellor Helmut Kohl and other party colleagues
officially expressed their regret for this move, the conservative
press openly announced their relief. A symbolic photo of Ransch was
published together with the article: In the background, two
direction indicators are discernable, one pointing to the
'emergency exit' and the other to the 'escape route'. What led up
to this state of affairs? Some months before, Ransch had triggered
off a storm of public indignation due to her proposal to partly re
place the present German child-benefit system by 'tax fines for the
childless'. To be exact, the minister's idea was to distinctly
increase child allowance and child benefit, and to bill childless
families for this measure, that is, childless couples and singles
should have to payoff a tax surcharge christened 'Zu kunftsbeitrag'
(, contribution to the future'). However, only the second part of
her proposal, the tax fine, made it to the headlines (compare, for
exam ple, 'Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung', February 19th, 1994,
and 'Die Welt', March 28th, 1994)."
Almost all advanced democracies have launched significant
privatization programs over the last three decades. However, while
there was a global run into privatization, substantial
cross-national differences in the divesture of state-owned
enterprises can be observed. This book focuses on the political
economy of privatization, and addresses the questions 'What are the
driving forces behind this development and how can the variation be
explained?' which are of both theoretical and empirical interest.
While the topic itself is not new, the existing comparative
literature on the political economy of privatization suffers from
at least two major shortcomings: First, recent macro-quantitative
analysis in political science and economics has only focused on
material privatization; formal privatization has hitherto been
neglected due to an absence of data, even though this type of
privatization is of eminent relevance in the public utility
sectors. Second, most of the empirical studies in this area treat
countries as independent units. In reality, however, policy
decisions are likely to be interdependent. Policy decisions taken
in one country influence the decision-making process in others.
Given these shortcomings in the existing literature, the idea of
this volume is to supply a fresh and comprehensive overview of the
political economy of privatization using a new data set, the REST
database. The empirical analysis covers 20 OECD countries in the
period between 1980 and the advent of the global economic crisis in
2008. The recent economic crisis provides a good opportunity to
take stock of the changing role of government in economic over the
last three decades.
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