Results 291 to 300 of about 880,220 (335)
Game of stones: making a decision about economic value of a weight-loss intervention. [PDF]
Ladapo JA.
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Community engagement and life satisfaction amongst older adults in Chengdu, China: Moderated mediation by social capital, gender and age. [PDF]
Huang CC, Xie X, Tu Y, Jiang X.
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Evaluating the disaggregated impact of renewable and non renewable electricity generation on economic welfare in India. [PDF]
Khan KA+3 more
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SSRN Electronic Journal, 2013
This paper presents the Paretian Watershed and the fundamental theorems of welfare economics. It distinguishes the British approach (à la Kaldor-Hicks) from the American approach (à la Bergson-Samuelson) to new welfare economics. It develops the more recent domains of happiness economics, the comparative approach by Amartya Sen, and the theory of fair ...
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This paper presents the Paretian Watershed and the fundamental theorems of welfare economics. It distinguishes the British approach (à la Kaldor-Hicks) from the American approach (à la Bergson-Samuelson) to new welfare economics. It develops the more recent domains of happiness economics, the comparative approach by Amartya Sen, and the theory of fair ...
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A Critique of Welfare Economics
Southern Economic Journal, 1951A Critique of Welfare Economics was first published in 1950. It was concerned with the exposition, criticism, and appreciation of the theory of economic welfare as it had been developed to that date. It was an attempt to clarify what was meant by 'welfare'; to distinguish measurable, verifiable elements of the theory from subjective normative ...
Ian Malcolm David Little, K. E. Boulding
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Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy, 2011
AbstractThis article highlights some key areas where economics can contribute to the current debate about animal welfare. Production economics reveals that producers will not maximize animal welfare, even if animal well‐being is highly correlated with output.
Jayson L. Lusk, F. Bailey Norwood
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AbstractThis article highlights some key areas where economics can contribute to the current debate about animal welfare. Production economics reveals that producers will not maximize animal welfare, even if animal well‐being is highly correlated with output.
Jayson L. Lusk, F. Bailey Norwood
openaire +3 more sources