James Buchanan: Clubs and Alternative Welfare Economics - Université de Montpellier
Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Economic Perspectives Année : 2021

James Buchanan: Clubs and Alternative Welfare Economics

Résumé

Buchanan did not write “An Economic Theory of Club” to complement Samuelson’s analysis of public goods, but to develop a radically different, form of welfare economics – in which there is no social welfare function and individual utility functions cannot be “read” by external observers. It was the perspective Buchanan adopted to analyze the pricing of public goods and services, and from which he also envisaged clubs. The main feature Buchanan attributed to clubs was to implement a condition that made no sense in Samuelson’s framework but that was crucial in Buchanan’s and clubs made Samuelson’s collective condition useless. Buchanan and Samuelson disagreed over the allocation of the costs of the public good on each individual. To Buchanan, it was by relying on individual’s preferences. To Samuelson, by using a social welfare function. This has not much to do with the nature of the good, its “physical properties” to use Buchanan’s words.
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Dates et versions

hal-03326422 , version 1 (26-08-2021)

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Alain Marciano. James Buchanan: Clubs and Alternative Welfare Economics. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2021, 35, pp.243 - 256. ⟨10.1257/jep.35.3.243⟩. ⟨hal-03326422⟩
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