Economic justice is a component of social justice and welfare economics. It is a set of moral and ethical principles for building economic institutions, where the ultimate goal is to create an opportunity for each person to establish a sufficient material foundation upon which to have a dignified, productive, and creative life.[1]."
Justice in economics is a subcategory of social justice and welfare economics. It is a "set of moral and ethical principles for building economic institutions".[2] Economic justice aims to create opportunities for every person to have a dignified, productive and creative life that extends beyond simple economics.[3]
Some ideas about justice and ethics overlap with the origins of economic thought,[8] often as to distributive justice[9] and sometimes as to Marxian analysis.[10] The subject is a topic of normative economics and philosophy and economics.[11] In early welfare economics, where mentioned, 'justice' was little distinguished from maximization of all individual utility functions or a social welfare function. As to the latter, Paul Samuelson (1947),[12] expanding on work of Abram Bergson, represents a social welfare function in general terms as any ethical belief system required to order any (hypothetically feasible) social states for the entire society as "better than", "worse than", or "indifferent to" each other. Kenneth Arrow (1963) showed a difficulty of trying to extend a social welfare function consistently across different hypothetical ordinal utility functions even apart from justice.[13] Utility maximization survives, even with the rise of ordinal-utility/Pareto theory, as an ethical basis for economic-policy judgments[14] in the wealth-maximization criterion invoked in law and economics.[15]
^• Peter J. Hammond, 1987. "altruism," The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 1, pp. 85-87. • James Andreoni, William T. Harbaugh, and Lise Vesterlund, 2008. "altruism in experiments," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract.
^Joseph J. Spengler, 1980. Origins of Economic Thought and Justice. Link to 1-page chapter-content previews.
^• Edmund S. Phelps, ed., 1973. Economic Justice: Selected Readings. Penguin. • _____, ed., 1987. "distributive justice," The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 1, pp. 886-88.
^• Norman Geras, 1985. "The Controversy about Marx and Justice," New Left Review, 150, pp. 47-85. • J.E.Roemer, 1987. "Marxian value analysis". The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 3, pp. 383-87.
^• Jonathan Riley, 2008. "utilitarianism and economic theory," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract. • Charles Blackorby, Walter Bossert, and David Donaldson, 2002. "Utilitarianism and the Theory of Justice," Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare, v. 1, ch. 11, pp. 543-596. Abstract. • A.B. Atkinson, 1982. Social Justice and Public Policy.Description and scroll to chapter-preview links.
^• Richard A. Posner, 1981. The Economics of Justice. DescriptionArchived 2009-12-27 at the Wayback Machine and chapter links, pp. xi-xiii. • Peter J. Hammond, 1982. "The Economics of Justice and the Criterion of Wealth Maximization," Yale Law Journal, 91(7), pp. 1493-1507. • Richard Schmalbeck, 1983. "The Justice of Economics: An Analysis of Wealth Maximization as a Normative Goal," Columbia Law Review, 83(2), pp. 488-525. • Denis J. Brion, 2000. "Norms & Values in Law & Economics," in Encyclopedia of Law & Economics, v. 1, pp. 1041-1071. • Louis Kaplow and Steven Shavell, 2003. Fairness versus Welfare: Notes on the Pareto Principle, Preferences, and Distributive Justice," Journal of Legal Studies, 32(1), pp. 331-362. • A. Mitchell Polinsky and Steven Shavell, 2008. "law, economic analysis of," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract.
ch. 9*, "Impersonality and Collective Quasi-Orderings," pp. 152-160.
^• Kenneth J. Arrow, 1983. Collected Papers, v. 1, Social Choice and Justice. DescriptionArchived 2009-04-16 at the Wayback Machine, contentsArchived 2008-04-17 at the Wayback Machine, and chapter-preview links. • Amartya Sen, 1985. "Social Choice and Justice: A Review Article," Journal of Economic Literature, 23(4), pp. 1764-76. Review of Arrow, 1983. Reprinted in Sen, 2003, Rationality and Freedom, pp. 325-348.
^• Serge-Christophe Kolm, 1969. "The Optimal Production of Social Justice," in J. Margolis and H. Guitton (eds.), Public Economics, Macmillan. • _____, 1996. Modern Theories of Justice. Description and scroll to chapter-preview links. MIT Press. • _____, [1972] 2000. Justice and Equity. DescriptionArchived 2012-10-10 at the Wayback Machine & scroll to chapter-preview links. MIT Press.
^• John E. Roemer, 2008 "equality of opportunity," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract. • _____, 1998. Equality of Opportunity, Harvard University Press. Description and scrollable preview.
^Amartya K. Sen, 1985. Commodities and Capabilities. Description.
^Amartya Sen, [1987] 2008. "justice," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract. • _____, 2000. "Social Justice and the Distribution of Income," in Handbook of Income Distribution, v. 1, Ch. 1, pp. 59-85. • _____, 2009. The Idea of Justice, Harvard University Press. Description and preview link.
^Bertil Tungodden, 2008. "justice (new perspectives)," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract.
^Louis Kaplow, 2008. "Pareto principle and competing principles," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract.
^Kenneth J. Arrow, 1977. "Extended Sympathy and the Possibility of Social Choice," American Economic Review, 67(1), pp. 219-225.
^Kenneth J. Arrow, 1983. Collected Papers of Kenneth J. Arrow, v. 1, Social Choice and Justice, preview.
ch. 9*, "Impersonality and Collective Quasi-Orderings," pp. 152-160. • _____, 1977. "Social Choice Theory: A Re-Examination," Econometrica, 45(1), pp. 53-88. • _____, [1987] 2008. "justice," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract. • _____, 2009. The Idea of Justice, Harvard University Press. Description and scroll to Table of Contents, preview, back-cover comments of Hilary Putnam, Kenneth Arrow, Philippe Van Parijs, and G. A. Cohen, and a guide to reviews.
^• Walter Bossert and John A. Weymark, 2008. "social choice (new developments)," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract. • Charles Blackorby, Walter Bossert, and David Donaldson, 2002. "Utilitarianism and the Theory of Justice," Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare, v. 1, ch. 11, pp. 543–596. Abstract.