Applied Welfare Economics uses important results in the welfare economics literature to extend a conventional Harberger cost-benefit analysis. After reviewing the properties of different welfare measures a conventional welfare equation is used to evaluate marginal policy changes in a general equilibrium economy with tax distortions. The analysis is extended to accommodate trade and income taxes, time, internationally traded goods, and non-tax distortions, including externalities, non-competitive behaviour, public goods and price quantity controls. The welfare analysis is developed in stages, and where possible is explained using diagrams, to make it more adaptable to the different institutional arrangements encountered in applied work. With this in mind, computable welfare expressions are solved using demand and supply elasticities for each good. The lump-sum transfers used in a conventional analysis to separate welfare effects are carefully examined to identify the role of the marginal social cost of public funds (MCF) in policy evaluation. The main contribution in the book is to separate income effects for marginal policy changes in the shadow value of government revenue, which converts efficiency effects into dollar changes in private surplus. It is a scaling coefficient that makes income effects irrelevant in single (aggregated) consumer economies, and conveniently isolates distributional effects in heterogeneous consumer economies. The decomposition is used to test for Pareto improvements, and to examine the separate but related roles of the shadow value of government revenue and the MCF in applied work.
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Extends a conventional cost-benefit analysis by using important results in welfare economics. The analysis is extended to accommodate trade and income taxes, time, internationally traded goods, and non-tax distortions, including externalities non-competetive behaviour, public goods and price-quantity controls.
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1. Measuring welfare changes- a brief overview ; 2. Conventional shadow prices ; 3. Distributional effects ; 4. Non-tax distortions in markets ; 5. International trade ; 6. Revised shadow prices ; 7. The marginal social cost of public funds ; 8. Time and the social discount rate ; 9. Optimal commodity taxation ; 10. The optimal provision of public goods ; 11. Problems
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Combines traditional cost-benefit analysis and more modern approaches to public economics Includes useful exercises Ideal for use as a graduate text or reference
Chris Jones is Senior Lecturer in Economics at the Australian National University. He has also held positions in the Department of Health in Western Australia and the Reserve Bank of Australia.
Combines traditional cost-benefit analysis and more modern approaches to public economics Includes useful exercises Ideal for use as a graduate text or reference

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199281978
Publisert
2005
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
662 gr
Høyde
242 mm
Bredde
162 mm
Dybde
23 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
336

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Chris Jones is Senior Lecturer in Economics at the Australian National University. He has also held positions in the Department of Health in Western Australia and the Reserve Bank of Australia.