Pluralist welfare egalitarianism and the expensive tastes objection
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Date
2016
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Nature
Abstract
In this article we aim to reduce the force of the expensive tastes objection to equality of welfare by constructing a pluralist welfare egalitarian theory which is not defeated by it. In the first part, we argue that Cohen’s condition of responsibility-sensitiveness is not able to provide a satisfactory rebuttal of the expensive tastes objection for at least a class of theories of justice, namely those that adhere to a methodologically fact-sensitive view. In the second part, we explore the possibility of constructing a welfare egalitarian theory that gives weight to both equality and efficiency. We propose two alternatives, which integrate a utilitarian constraint and a Weak Pareto constraint on equality and show that both theories consistently differentiate between compensable and non-compensable expensive tastes, but should ultimately be rejected because of other unattractive implications. Finally, we develop a fairness-constrained theory of welfare egalitarianism and suggest that it can distinguish between compensable and noncompensable expensive tastes in both a conceptually consistent and a morally plausible manner, without generating decisive additional objections.
Description
The author Oana-Alexandra Dervis is affiliated to SNSPA, Faculty of Political Science.
The article is freely available on the link.springer.com platform at: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1057/cpt.2015.67
Creative Commons License: CC BY 4.0
Keywords
Efficiency, Responsibility
Citation
Volacu, A., & Dervis, O. A. (2016). Pluralist welfare egalitarianism and the expensive tastes objection. Contemporary Political Theory, 15(3). 285-303. https://doi.org/10.1057/cpt.2015.67