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      The Death of Welfare Economics

      History of Political Economy
      Duke University Press

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          Abstract

          The death of welfare economics has been declared several times. One of the reasons cited for these plural obituaries is that Kenneth Arrow’s impossibility theorem, as set out in his pathbreaking Social Choice and Individual Values in 1951, has shown that the social welfare function—one of the main concepts of the new welfare economics as defined by Abram Bergson (Burk) in 1938 and clarified by Paul Samuelson in the Foundations of Economic Analysis—does not exist under reasonable conditions. Indeed, from the very start, Arrow kept asserting that his famous impossibility result has direct and devastating consequences for the Berg-son-Samuelson social welfare function, though he seemed to soften his position in the early eighties. On his side, especially from the seventies on, Samuelson remained active on this issue and continued to defend the concept he had devised with Bergson, tooth and nail, against Arrow’s attacks. The aim of this article is precisely to examine this rather strange controversy, which is almost unknown in the scientific community, even though it lasted more than fifty years and involved a conflict between two economic giants, Arrow and Samuelson, and, behind them, two distinct communities—welfare economics, which was on the wane, against the emerging social choice theory—representing two conflicting ways of dealing with mathematical tools in welfare economics and two different conceptions of social welfare.

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          Most cited references72

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          A Difficulty in the Concept of Social Welfare

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            Beyond Revealed Preference: Choice-Theoretic Foundations for Behavioral Welfare Economics*

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              The Possibility of Social Choice

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                History of Political Economy
                Duke University Press
                0018-2702
                1527-1919
                October 1 2019
                October 1 2019
                : 51
                : 5
                : 827-865
                Article
                10.1215/00182702-7803691
                7faa742b-92f1-4c45-ba74-1f65e2d14d7f
                © 2019
                History

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