Robertson and the Cambridge approach to utility and welfare
研究了罗伯逊为捍卫剑桥效用传统而反对新福利经济学的努力,指出他主张福利经济学应基于基数效用并拒绝序数主义革命。
The article investigates Dennis Robertson’s effort to defend the Cambridge utilitarian tradition against the ‘new welfare economics’, developed in the 1930s and 1940s on the basis of Lionel Robbins’s influential criticism of the scientific legitimacy of interpersonal comparisons of utility. It is shown that Robertson’s sustained endeavour to rescue Marshallian cardinal utility attracted some attention from economists at the time. Robertson claimed that welfare economics should be based on cardinal utility and that the ordinalist revolution in the consumer and welfare theories should be rejected. His claims were based on a careful discussion of what he saw as theoretical inconsistencies of the ordinalist approach.