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Should Preferences Count?

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Should Preferences Count?
Author(s)Sagoff, Mark
AbstractA leading assumption of welfare economics, which presents itself as a normative discipline, is that satisfying preferences should be an important consideration in resource allocation. Welfare economists justify this assumption with reference either to the concept of choice or to that of well-being. This article argues that the concept of preferences is neither clear nor useful. Preferences do not necessarily correspond to the choices people actually make, and satisfying people’s preferences bears little relationship to increasing their well-being.
Pages127-145
IssueNo
ArticleAccess to Article Summary Article
SourceLand Economics
VolumeNo2
PubDateMay 1994
ISBN_ISSN0023-7639

Frontier Issues in Economic Thought

  • Volume 1: A Survey of Ecological Economics
  • Volume 2: The Consumer Society
  • Volume 3: Human Well-Being and Economic Goals
  • Volume 4: The Changing Nature of Work
  • Volume 5: The Political Economy of Inequality
  • Volume 6: A Survey of Sustainable Development


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