Stochastic Dominance and Demographic Policy Evaluation: A Critique

Publicado en

  • JODE - Journal of Demographic Economics

Resumen

  • Stochastic dominance (SD) is commonly used to rank income distributions and assess social policies. The literature argues that SD is a robust criterion for policy evaluation because it requires minimal knowledge of the social welfare function. We argue that, on the contrary, SD is not a robust criterion. We do this by carefully introducing microfoundations into a model by Chu and Koo (1990) who use SD to provide support to family-planning programs aiming at reducing the fertility of the poor. We show that fertility restrictions are generally detrimental for both individual and social welfare in spite of the fact that SD holds. Our findings are an application of the Lucas’ Critique.

fecha de publicación

  • 2016

Líneas de investigación

  • Children
  • Demographic Policies
  • Fertility
  • Income Distribution
  • One Child Policy
  • Stochastic Dominance
  • Welfare

Página inicial

  • 111

Última página

  • 138

Volumen

  • 82

Issue

  • 1