Copyright
Martin J. Osborne; Ariel RubinsteinPublished On
2023-06-26Page Range
pp. 317–328Language
- English
Print Length
11 pagesSocialism
Chapter of: Models in Microeconomic Theory: Expanded Second Edition (She)(pp. 317–328)
Consider a society in which each individual can produce the same consumption good, like food, using a single input, like land. Each individual is characterized by her productivity. The higher an ndividual’s productivity, the more output she produces with any given amount of the input.
An economic system can be thought of as a rule that specifies the output produced by the entire society and the allocation of this output among the individuals as a function of the individuals’ productivities. Should individuals with high productivity get more output than ones with low productivity? Should two individuals with the same productivity receive the same amount of output? Should an increase in an individual’s productivity result in her receiving more output?
The design of an economic system requires an answer to such questions. The approach in this chapter (like those in Chapters 3 and 20) is axiomatic. The central result specifies conditions capturing efficiency and fairness that are satisfied only by an economic system that resembles the socialist ideal.
Contributors
Martin J. Osborne
(author)Professor Emeritus of Economics at University of Toronto
Ariel Rubinstein
(author)Emeritus in School of Economics at Tel Aviv University
Professor of Economics at New York University