Public goods

Supplying public goods generates costs and benefits that can be allocated among individuals in different ways. Yet leading theories of justice within liberalism fail to offer concrete guidance on how these allocations should be assessed. This chapter critically examines a number of principles of dis...

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Bibliografski detalji
Glavni autori: Miller, D, Taylor, I
Daljnji autori: Olsaretti, S
Format: Book section
Jezik:English
Izdano: Oxford University Press 2018
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author Miller, D
Taylor, I
author2 Olsaretti, S
author_facet Olsaretti, S
Miller, D
Taylor, I
author_sort Miller, D
collection OXFORD
description Supplying public goods generates costs and benefits that can be allocated among individuals in different ways. Yet leading theories of justice within liberalism fail to offer concrete guidance on how these allocations should be assessed. This chapter critically examines a number of principles of distributive justice that might be used for this purpose. It argues that the appropriate principle will depend on whether the public goods in question are “essential public goods” (ones that are required by justice) or “discretionary public goods” (ones that are not). While a number of principles have previously been put forward for both categories, the chapter concludes that none of them are free from counter-intuitive implications. Further work is needed in order to arrive at a satisfactory way of assessing the distributive consequences of public good supply.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e9a9a165-3d55-4c27-b911-aadef9f586702023-12-01T10:03:51ZPublic goodsBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:e9a9a165-3d55-4c27-b911-aadef9f58670EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2018Miller, DTaylor, IOlsaretti, SSupplying public goods generates costs and benefits that can be allocated among individuals in different ways. Yet leading theories of justice within liberalism fail to offer concrete guidance on how these allocations should be assessed. This chapter critically examines a number of principles of distributive justice that might be used for this purpose. It argues that the appropriate principle will depend on whether the public goods in question are “essential public goods” (ones that are required by justice) or “discretionary public goods” (ones that are not). While a number of principles have previously been put forward for both categories, the chapter concludes that none of them are free from counter-intuitive implications. Further work is needed in order to arrive at a satisfactory way of assessing the distributive consequences of public good supply.
spellingShingle Miller, D
Taylor, I
Public goods
title Public goods
title_full Public goods
title_fullStr Public goods
title_full_unstemmed Public goods
title_short Public goods
title_sort public goods
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