Rawlsian Land Reform with Human Capital: A Social Inclusion Process for the Landless ‘Underdog’

dc.contributor.authorde Sousa, Miguel Rocha
dc.contributor.editorde Sousa, Miguel
dc.contributor.editorFilipe, José
dc.date.accessioned2018-02-16T12:53:28Z
dc.date.available2018-02-16T12:53:28Z
dc.date.issued2017-03
dc.description.abstractFocusing on the concept of Rawlsian-welfare-analysis, we evaluate land reform in a context of human capital. This theoretical and conceptual analysis is applied to the question of equity and social inclusion: our model previews that latifundia will be divided creating either mesofundia or microfundia. The way the social optimum is achieved, and the way we express the social welfare function is new to the literature, as far as we know, no Rawlsian including land reform has been tempted. The Rawlsian welfare function, in a context of uncertainty, corresponds to the max-min criteria. This means that if land is given to the social underdog, then his welfare improves, but the amount of land must be large enough in order to get him out of the poverty trap (human capital defined) threshold. The iteration of this principle to the successive “underdogs” creates the notion of a dynamic social including Rawlsian land reform. Equity can be improved if we look by the planner’s eyes in a Rawlsian way. This analysis then can be expanded to free market analysis, using the Second Fundamental Theorem of Welfare Analysis and market prices can be retrieved by the Negishi procedure. We also present a criticism to Rawlsian land reform, in the form of the least state interventionism, an utmost version of the liberal paradigm, the anarchic one - Nozickian land reform.por
dc.identifier.authoremailmrsousa@uevora.pt
dc.identifier.citationRocha de Sousa, M. (2016), “Rawlsian Land Reform with Human Capital: a social including process for the landless ‘underdog’” in Filipe,J. and Rocha de Sousa, M. (2016) Editors Special Issue: “The Political Economy of Land Reform”, at International Journal Of Latest Trends in Finance and Economic Sciences-(IJLTEFS), vol.6, no.4, December, pp.1238-1243.por
dc.identifier.issn2047-0916
dc.identifier.numrevno.4, December (2016)
dc.identifier.pagina1238-1243.
dc.identifier.principalpublicationtitleThe Political Economy of Land Reform
dc.identifier.revistaInternational Journal Of Latest Trends in Finance and Economic Sciences-(IJLTEFS)
dc.identifier.scientificarea650por
dc.identifier.sharewithCEFAGE-UE; CICPpor
dc.identifier.urihttp://ojs.excelingtech.co.uk/index.php/IJLTFES/article/view/Rawls
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10174/22288
dc.identifier.volumevol.6
dc.language.isoengpor
dc.peerreviewedyespor
dc.rightsopenAccesspor
dc.subjectLand reformpor
dc.subjectJohn Rawlspor
dc.subjectEquitypor
dc.subjectSocial Policypor
dc.subjectInclusionpor
dc.subjectWelfare Analysispor
dc.subjectMax-minpor
dc.subject"Underdog"por
dc.titleRawlsian Land Reform with Human Capital: A Social Inclusion Process for the Landless ‘Underdog’por
dc.typearticlepor

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