← Search

The Possibility of Rational Social Choice in an Economy

Martin J. Bailey

Journal of Political Economy 1979

This paper examines the implications of an error or oversight in the statement and proof of Arrow's celebrated General Possibility Theorem. Besides showing that, strictly speaking, the theorem is false, we show that the force of the correctly stated theorem and of most of its descendants applies only to a class of election procedures and not to social choice in an economy. A Bergson welfare function can be constructed that satisfies all the stated Arrow axioms and conditions, although the construction is unnecessary for consistent, effective social choice.

DOI
10.1086/260738
Volume
87 (1)
Pages
37-56
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref