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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:18:22 2006 |
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======================= HES POSTING =================
This was posted without response on RESECON, which is devoted mainly to
environmental economics and the like. It seems as though HES people
can contribute.
Mike Robison
Michigan State University
[Editor's Note:
Mike, I trust you will forward responses to Graham Marshall -- HB]
Graham Marshall wrote:
>
> Dear RESECON-ers
>
> In neo-classical economics we assume that all agents are motivated solely
> by 'self-interest'. But what precisely do we mean? Do we mean that
> individuals will only do something if it directly benefits themselves (a
> narrow definition)? Or do we mean that individuals might also sometimes
do
> things for other people to the extent that they indirectly reap
> satisfaction from such 'generosity' (a broad definition)?
>
> I've been reading around trying to figure this out. There are
'hard-liners'
> like Stigler and Becker who seem to be arguing the case for the narrow
> definition. (At least, that is how Amartya Sen in 'On Ethics and
Economics'
> (1987) interprets them). There are other like Lipsey et al. (1986)
> (Positive Economics for Australian Students) who have adopted the broad
> definition. For instance, Lipsey et al. say that the assumption of
> self-interest "is sometimes taken to mean that households are assumed to
be
> narrowly selfish and devoid of any altruistic motives. On the contrary,
if
> a household derives satisfaction from giving its money away to others,
this
> can be incorporated into the analysis . . . ".
>
> I have two questions:
>
> 1. Does 'mainstream' neo-classical economics have a strict position on
> which assumption is the valid one?
> 2. Is the attainment of Pareto-optimality conditional, inter alia, on
> utilisation of the narrow assumption? (as Sen (1987) suggests)?
>
> I would appreciate your help on this. I would particularly like to be
> steered to 'authoritative' literature that answers these questions.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> """""""""""""""""""""""""
> Graham Marshall
> Department of Economics
> University of New England
> Armidale NSW 2351
> Australia
> Phone: +61 (0) 67 73 3250
> Fax: +61 (0) 67 73 3280
> E-mail: [log in to unmask]
> ____________________________
>
> 42nd ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE AUSTRALIAN AGRICULTURAL
> AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS SOCIETY
> 19-21 January, University of New England, Armidale, Australia.
> Paper titles due 1st August 1997. Abstracts due 1st November 1997.
> For further details see the conference website:
> http://www.une.edu.au/febl/DARE/aares.htm
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