The earliest example of "deadweight loss" in JSTOR is not as early as
Hotelling. It is
Paul A. Samuelson, "The Transfer Problem and Transport Costs: The Terms
of Trade When Impediments are Absent," /The Economic Journal/, Vol. 62,
No. 246 (Jun., 1952), pp. 278-304.
"Dead loss" shows up as earlier as 1887, but not in the sense of
deadweight loss. The following might be the earliest relevant JSTOR
example, but I have not read it carefully:
C. F. Bickerdike, "The Theory of Incipient Taxes," /The Economic
Journal/, Vol. 16, No. 64 (Dec., 1906), pp. 529-535
Kevin Hoover
Rojhat Berdan Avsar wrote:
> ----------------- HES POSTING -----------------
> Dear all,
>
> I was wondering if anybody knows the origin of the term "deadweight loss". I was able to track it down to Hotelling's 1938 Econometrica paper as "dead loss". Is anybody familiar with any previous record of the term?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Rojhat Berdan Avsar
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KEVIN D. HOOVER
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