Theoretical Economics, Volume 20, Number 3 (July 2025)

Theoretical Economics 20 (2025), 911–939


Empirical welfare economics

Christopher P. Chambers, Federico Echenique

Abstract


Welfare economics relies on access to agents' utility functions: we revisit classical questions in welfare economics, assuming access to data on agents' past choices instead of their utilities. Our main result considers the existence of utilities that render a given allocation Pareto optimal. We show that a candidate allocation is efficient for some utilities consistent with the choice data if and only if it is efficient for an incomplete relation derived from the revealed preference relations and convexity. Similar ideas are used to make counterfactual choices for a single consumer, policy comparisons by the Kaldor criterion, and offer bounds on the degree of inefficiency in a Pareto suboptimal allocation.

Keywords: Revealed preference theory, welfare economic, general equilibrium

JEL classification: D61,D12

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