Individual Sense of Justice and Harsanyi's Impartial Observer
Abhinash Borah
No 12, Working Papers from Ashoka University, Department of Economics
Abstract:
We revisit, within Harsanyi’s impartial observer setting, the question of foundations underlying procedural fairness concerns in welfare judgments. In our setup—that of allocating an indivisible good using a lottery—such concerns, presumably, matter. We draw from the social preferences literature and relax a typical assumption made while addressing this question, namely, that individuals in society do not care about procedural fairness and such concerns arise exclusively at a societal level, which are captured by non-linear social welfare functions (SWFs). In our model, individual attitudes towards procedural fairness are identified and factored into welfare judgments. Specifically, we provide an axiomatic basis within Harsanyi’s (1955) framework to represent procedural fairness sensitive individual preferences by the representation in Karni and Safra (2002). We then show, in terms of underlying axioms, how such individual assessments incorporating both risk and procedural fairness attitudes can be aggregated by means of utilitarian and generalized utilitarian SWFs.
Keywords: generalized; utilitarianism; Harsanyi’s; impartial; observer; Karni-Safra; (“individual; sense; of; justiceâ€; ); preferences; Procedural; fairness; social; preferences; under; risk; utilitarianism (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 41
Date: 2019-06-03
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-hpe and nep-upt
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https://dp.ashoka.edu.in/ash/wpaper/paper12_0.pdf (application/pdf)
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Journal Article: Individual sense of justice and Harsanyi’s impartial observer (2021)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ash:wpaper:12
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