[EM] When and how can we speak of "individual utility" and "social utility"?
raphfrk at netscape.net
raphfrk at netscape.net
Fri Feb 23 15:07:36 PST 2007
Martin Bailey suggested "maximise the probability of minimising harm" as the
method to combine utility functions into a single social decision.
For something like this to work, there would need to be a reference point as
the question then becomes, "minimise harm relative to what?".
Anyway, back to Pareto:
(Par) The "Pareto" principle:
If ui(x)>=ui(y) for all i, then xSy.
If you have have a currency this can be used to compare 2 utility functions.
A currency in this context is something the everyone has an unlimited supply of
and which they always consider having more of it being better (all else being equal).
This obviously is somewhat of a contradiction. However, when comparing small
changes, it is reasonable.
Also, it should also be finely divisible.
(Currency) Ui(x and c(z)) > Ui(x) for all x, i and z>0
The reverse is also true, by definition. It means that c is a currency if everyone values
having more of it. (z is the number of units).
State "x and c(z)" is state x where the only difference is that the person has z units
of the currency more.
(Kaldor-Hicks) The "Kaldor-Hicks" principle:
If
ui(x and c(yi) >= ui(x and c(yi) for all i
AND
sum(yi) >= 0
for some set y then xSy.
This basically says that an outcome is better for society if the costs are less than
the benefits. If a change does $100 of damage to 100 people and provides $10 of
benefit to 1 million people, then it is worth doing. Under Kaldor-Hicks, the payment
doesn't actually happen.
If people had unlimited money, it is possible to convert it to pareto efficiency by
actually doing the transfer payments. Since the sum of yi is positive, the total
amount people are willing to pay to obtain the change exceeds the total amount
people want to allow the change. This means that money can be moved from
one group to the other with some to spare.
Another alternative is to take it in small steps. If
aSz under Kaldor-Hicks
then there will be a set of states a', b, c ... and z such that
(a')Sb and bSc and cSd .... and xSy and ySz.
If z is the current state, then this provides a method for getting from z to a'.
The ideal would be to find the chain that minimises the currency transfer for each person.
This min could be
- minimise the max payment required by any one person
- minimise the max payment as a proportion of wealth required
or some other system.
Everyone will agree than a' is an improvement over z and the only difference between
a and a' is the amount of money in everyone's bank account.
One other thing about choosing the best option from a social utility point of view is
taking into account how the rule will affect future actions. Taking something from
someone to give to another may result in an improvement in the utility sum, but
there could be long term utility problems.
If the person who loses his loaves of bread is a baker, the supply of bread may
decline because the baker, who "has more bread than he needs" always ends
up having them allocated to someone else.
Raphfrk
--------------------
Interesting site
"what if anyone could modify the laws"
www.wikocracy.com
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