Market failure, inequality and redistribution
We consider the following question: does market failure justify redistribution? We argue that the general answer to this question is no, in the sense that policies for correcting market failures do not aim at producing a "desirable" income distribution. This follows from the fact that, by construction, market failure is a deviation from "efficiency" that does not involve any notion of a desirable distribution of welfare (or income). However, there are special cases where a "corrective measure" involving redistribution can offset a market failure, so this can provide a form of efficiency-based justification for redistribution.
Year of publication: |
2008
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Authors: | Dufour, Dufour , Jean-Marie |
Published in: |
Ethics and Economics. - CREUM, Université de Montréal. - Vol. 6.2008, 1, 8, p. 9-9
|
Publisher: |
CREUM, Université de Montréal |
Subject: | positive economics | normative economics | welfare economics | market failure | externality | taxation | social choice | public choice |
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