Distribution in Benefit-Cost Analysis: A Review of Theoretical Issues
- 1 April 1976
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Public Finance Quarterly
- Vol. 4 (2) , 123-150
- https://doi.org/10.1177/109114217600400201
Abstract
The paper investigates the distributional basis for benefit-cost analysis when utility functions are independent. The change in utility for any individual caused by a given project can be written as the product of the marginal utility of income (Λ) and the income equivalent (measured by the appropriate area under the demand curve). Three theoretical positions are possible to deal with the distributional issue. First, one may assume Λ to be the same for all those affected by the project. A second position admits that Λ is dependent on income and tries to determine how different people view their own marginal utilities of income. Finally, it is possible to define the marginal utility of income in terms of social value judgments. This requires a social welfare function which reflects either the collectivity's expressed consensus or the decision maker's own set of judgments. The first approach is most commonly adopted and most convenient for actual analysis. The paper advocates more explicit analysis of distributional effects than is commonly undertaken and disputes the claim that such analysis is outside the professional realm of the economist.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cost-Benefit AnalysisPublished by Springer Nature ,1972
- The Concept of Economic Surplus and Its Use in Economic AnalysisThe Economic Journal, 1971
- Income redistribution and social choice: A pragmatic approachPublic Choice, 1969
- Benefit-Cost Analysis: Its Relevance to Public Investment DecisionsThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1966
- The Calculus of ConsentPublished by University of Michigan Library ,1960
- A Difficulty in the Concept of Social WelfareJournal of Political Economy, 1950
- Community IndifferenceThe Review of Economic Studies, 1946
- The Foundations of Welfare EconomicsThe Economic Journal, 1939
- Welfare Propositions of Economics and Interpersonal Comparisons of UtilityThe Economic Journal, 1939
- A Reformulation of Certain Aspects of Welfare EconomicsThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1938