Thinking about Inequality
Personal Judgment and Income Distributions
Frank Cowell author Yoram Amiel author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:9th Dec '99
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A non-technical analysis of inequality and income distribution, first published in 1999.
This 1999 book offers a non-technical analysis of inequality and income distribution. It considers the way that broad ideas about the meaning of inequality are translated into specific statistical tools and with the appropriateness of the assumptions used in the literature.What is inequality? In the late 1990s there was an explosion of interest in the subject that yielded a substantial body of formal tools and results for income-distribution analysis. Nearly all of this is founded on a small set of core assumptions - such as the Principle of Transfers, scale independence, the population principle∑ - that are used to give meaning to specific concepts of inequality measurement, inequality ranking and, indeed, to inequality itself. But does the standard axiomatic structure coincide with public perceptions of inequality? Or is the economist's concept of inequality a thing apart, perpetuated through serial brainwashing in the way the subject is studied and taught? In this 1999 book, Amiel and Cowell examine the evidence from a large international questionnaire experiment using student respondents. Along with basic 'cake-sharing' issues, related questions involving social-welfare rankings, the relationship between inequality and overall income growth and the meaning of poverty comparisons are considered.
' … provides a neat and comprehensible introduction to the principles of the modern approach to inequality measurement.' Economic Journal
ISBN: 9780521466967
Dimensions: 244mm x 170mm x 11mm
Weight: 320g
196 pages