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greentower's avatar

Milanovic I'm awestruck by your empirical work but, apologies in advance, your normative political philosophy arguments are too often shallow, unconvincing and even worse, as in this case, self-contradictory.

You write:

"The third ground is philosophical ... Because we are all equal individuals ... we should all have an approximately equal opportunity to develop our skills and to lead a “good (and pleasant) life”. "

But that claim is inconsistent with you earlier rejection of welfarism:

"There is, I believe, no way to compare utilities of different persons. ... while both your and my marginal utility functions are decreasing, my level of utility may, at any point, be orders of magnitude greater than yours or the reverse ... Furthermore ... conditions of happiness are contradictory"

Because if we cannot compare the interpersonal levels of utility of persons A and B then we also cannot compare if A and B have been given equal opportunity to lead a "good (and pleasant) life" (a life of a certain level of welfare). Because, as posited by your rejection of welfarism, what set of opportunities A needs to lead a good/pleasant life can be "orders of magnitude greater" than what B needs. Or vice versa. In general if there is no way to know interpersonal levels of some final good X (flourishing, happiness, whatever) then there is also no way to know what amounts of some instrumental good (that when had hopefully down the line generates X) should be given to persons A and B respectively to be able to say that A and B now have "equal opportunity" to reach some level of X. Not even "approximately" - since we can be "orders of magnitude" off.

The bind you get yourself in is in a way reminiscent of the problems Sen points out with Rawls view being too "resourcist". But your bind is much deeper than Rawls' because you much more categorically reject welfarism and you make that "orders of magnitude greater" claim.

The only way out of the bind is to accept that interpersonal welfarism claims must be made in any view that makes interpersonal policy prescriptions. Denying that is the greatest and most harmful mistake ever in the field of economics.

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钟建英's avatar

Might you want to qualify your views by taking into account physical disability? Which is a point that Sen frequently makes - the disabled might require greater income to reach the same level of wellbeing as the fully abled. And if we were prepared to address physical disability, what about social disadvantage due to gender, ethnicity, geography, history, etc?

So it's not "welfare" (per the English tradition), but "wellbeing" or "capabilities" (per Sen). I suppose the difference is that the English tradition assumes the same welfare function regardless of disability, disadvantage, history, geography etc. Whereas the latter doesn't.

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