Compensation principle
In welfare economics, the compensation principle refers to a decision rule used to select between pairs of alternative feasible social states. One of these states is the hypothetical point of departure. According to the compensation principle, if the prospective gainers could compensate prospective losers and leave no one worse off, the alternate state is to be selected. An example of a compensation principle is the Pareto criterion in which a change in states entails that such compensation is not merely feasible but required. Two variants are:
- the Pareto principle, which requires any change such that all gain.
- the Pareto criterion, which requires any change such that at least one gains and no one loses from the change.
Uses for the compensation principle include:
- comparisons between the welfare properties of perfect competition and imperfect competition
- the Pareto principle in social choice theory
- cost–benefit analysis.
Literature