Measuring Development

£99.50

Measuring Development

An Inequality Dominance Approach

Social welfare and social services Regional, state and other local government Economic growth Development economics and emerging economies

Author: Asis Kumar Banerjee

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Collection: Themes in Economics

Language: English

Published by: Springer

Published on: 24th June 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 1 Mb

ISBN: 9789811561610


Discussion of Economic Development and Ranking

This book discusses how to measure the level of development of an economy, particularly, the task of ranking economies in terms of their development. In this context, development is defined as an increase in people’s level of wellbeing. The book emphasises that wellbeing is a multidimensional concept, and that it is important to ask how equitably the fruits of development are distributed, and as such it focuses on multidimensional, inequality-sensitive development ranking. Rather than using various specific development indices, which would lead to different development rankings for a country, the book proposes a dominance approach, which formulates conditions under which two economies can be ranked unambiguously, making it valid for all reasonable development indices. With the help of illustrative examples using real-world data, it demonstrates that such unambiguous rankings are possible, and that the proposed approach can be used to complement traditional approaches. An invaluable resource for researchers working in the field of development, the book will also appeal to practitioners engaged in measuring development.


An excerpt from the book''s Foreword:
"[This book] is a comprehensive and valuable contribution to the literature on the measurement of inequality and the use of such measurement in the assessment of social welfare. I believe that it will be of much interest to researchers working on measures of inequality and social welfare as well as advanced graduate students who are looking for a solid introduction to this important area of normative economics."
-          Prof. Prasanta K. Pattanaik, University of California, Riverside, California, U.S.A.

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