His primary areas of study are Microeconomics, Compensation, Inequality, Mathematical economics and Social Welfare. His Microeconomics research incorporates themes from Public finance, Happiness, Redistribution and Distribution. Marc Fleurbaey interconnects Axiom, Resource allocation and Public relations in the investigation of issues within Compensation.
His Inequality research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Public economics, Health care, Order, Just society and Social mobility. His work deals with themes such as Characterization, Differential, Impossibility and Production, which intersect with Mathematical economics. His studies deal with areas such as Health equity, Social inequality, Social class and Macroeconomics as well as Social Welfare.
His primary scientific interests are in Microeconomics, Social Welfare, Mathematical economics, Inequality and Positive economics. His study looks at the relationship between Microeconomics and topics such as Compensation, which overlap with Ex-ante and Production. Marc Fleurbaey has researched Social Welfare in several fields, including Consumption, Impossibility, Public economics and Welfare.
The various areas that Marc Fleurbaey examines in his Mathematical economics study include Pareto principle, Characterization, Utilitarianism, Construct and Axiom. The Inequality study combines topics in areas such as Natural resource economics, Distribution, Econometrics and Social cost. His studies in Positive economics integrate themes in fields like Egalitarianism, Normative economics, Normative and Public finance.
Marc Fleurbaey mainly investigates Inequality, Welfare, Social Welfare, Natural resource economics and Positive economics. Distribution and Counterfactual thinking is closely connected to Econometrics in his research, which is encompassed under the umbrella topic of Inequality. His Welfare research incorporates elements of Population ethics, Demographic economics, Social choice theory, Public administration and Labour economics.
His Social Welfare research integrates issues from Pareto principle, Public economics and Rationality. His work in Positive economics tackles topics such as Egalitarianism which are related to areas like Social welfare function, Utilitarianism and Welfare economics. His work carried out in the field of Discounting brings together such families of science as Mathematical economics and Microeconomics, Social preferences.
Marc Fleurbaey mostly deals with Inequality, Social cost, Natural resource economics, Construct and Well-being. His Inequality study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Operationalization, Mathematical economics and Econometrics. His Mathematical economics study incorporates themes from Scrutiny and Social preferences.
Marc Fleurbaey works mostly in the field of Well-being, limiting it down to concerns involving Moral responsibility and, occasionally, Positive economics. His Discounting research includes elements of Rationality, Social choice theory, Microeconomics, Risk aversion and Climate policy. The study incorporates disciplines such as Social Welfare, Public economics and Ex-ante in addition to Contingent valuation.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Beyond GDP: The Quest for a Measure of Social Welfare
Marc Fleurbaey.
Voprosy Economiki (2012)
Fairness, responsibility, and welfare
Marc Fleurbaey.
(2008)
A Theory of Fairness and Social Welfare
Marc Fleurbaey;François Maniquet.
(2011)
Beyond GDP: Measuring Welfare and Assessing Sustainability
Marc Fleurbaey;Didier Blanchet.
(2013)
Compensation and responsibility
Marc Fleurbaey;François Maniquet.
Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare (2011)
Unfair inequalities in health and health care
Marc Fleurbaey;Erik Schokkaert;Erik Schokkaert.
Journal of Health Economics (2009)
Théories économiques de la justice
Marc Fleurbaey.
(1996)
Equal Opportunity or Equal Social Outcome
Marc Fleurbaey.
Economics and Philosophy (1995)
Ex ante versus ex post equality of opportunity
Marc Fleurbaey;Vito Peragine.
Economica (2013)
Fair Income Tax
Marc Fleurbaey;François Maniquet.
The Review of Economic Studies (2006)
If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.
We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:
KU Leuven
Cornell University
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Vanderbilt University
Norwegian School of Economics
Princeton University
University of Liège
Yale University
Waseda University
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
University of Regina
University of Nottingham
Intel (United States)
Institut Mines-Télécom
Seoul National University
Ningbo University
Shandong University
Harbin Institute of Technology
Jiangsu University
University of Salerno
Sanofi Pasteur
University of Padua
Queen's University
The University of Texas at Austin
Indiana University
Rochester Institute of Technology