This article argues against contribution-based conceptions of economic justice and in favor of distribution according to effort or sacrifice. It responds to important objections implicit in the work of Robert Nozick and John Rawls, and argues that market socialist economies cannot avoid being inequitable.
Albert, M., and R. Hahnel. 1991. The political economy of participatory economics. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
2.
Albert, M., and R. Hahnel. 2002. In defense of participatory economics, and reply. Science & Society66 (1): 721-721, 26-28.
3.
Bellamy, E.[1897] 1970. Equality. New York: AMS Press.
4.
Friedman, M.[1962] 1982. Capitalism and freedom. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
5.
Gale, W., and J. K. Scholz. 1994. Intergenerational transfers and the accumulation of wealth. Journal ofEconomic Perspectives8: 145-160.
6.
Gorbachev, M.1987. Perestroika: New thinking for our country and the world. New York: Harper & Row.
7.
Greenwood, D., and E. Wolff. 1992. Changes in wealth in the United States 1962-1983. Journal of PopulationEconomics5: 261-288.
8.
Hahnel, R.2002. The ABCs of political economy: A modern approach. London: Pluto.
9.
Hahnel, R.2005. Economic justice and democracy: From competition to cooperation. New York: Routledge.
10.
Hahnel, R., and M. Albert. 1990. Quiet revolution in welfare economics. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
11.
Henwood, D.1997. Wall Street: How it works and for whom. London: Verso.
12.
Horvat, B.1976. The Yugoslav economic system: The first labor-managed economy in the making. White Plains, NY: International Arts and Sciences Press.
13.
Howard, M.2000. Self-management and the crisis of socialism: The rose in the fist of the present. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
14.
Howe, I.1994. Thinking about socialism: Achievements, failures, and possibilities. In Why market socialism?Voices from dissent, ed. F. Roosevelt and D. Belkin. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe.
15.
Kotlikoff, L., and L. Summers. 1981. The role of intergenerational transfers in aggregate capital accumulation. Journal of Political Economy89 (4): 706-732.
16.
Kuttner, R.1997. Everything for sale: The virtues and limits of markets. New York: Knopf.
17.
Lange, O.1936. On the economic theory of socialism, part I. Review of Economic Studies4 (1): 53-71.
18.
Lange, O.1937. On the economic theory of socialism, part II. Review of Economic Studies4 (2): 123-142.
19.
Lange, O., and F. Taylor. 1938. On the economic theory of socialism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
20.
Lerner, A.1934. Economic theory and socialist economy. Review of Economic Studies2 (1): 51-61.
21.
Lerner, A.1936. A note on socialist economics. Review of Economic Studies4: 72-76.
22.
Modigliani, F.1988. The role of intergenerational transfers and life cycle saving in the accumulation of wealth. Journal of Economic Perspectives2: 15-40.
23.
Nove, A.1991. The economics of feasible socialism revisited. London: Harper Collins Academic.
24.
Nozick, R.1974. Anarchy, state, and utopia. New York: Basic Books.
Pomfret, J.2002. With carrots and sticks, China quiets protesters. Washington Post, March 22; A24-A24.
27.
Rawls, J.1971. A theory of justice. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
28.
Roemer, J.1994. The future of socialism. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
29.
Roosevelt, F.1994. Marx and market socialism. In Why market socialism? Voices from dissent, ed. F. Roosevelt and D. Belkin. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe.
30.
Schweickart, D.1996. Against capitalism. Boulder, CO: Westview.
31.
Vanek, J.1970. The general theory of labor-managed market economies. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
32.
Weisskopf, T.1992. Toward a socialism for the future in the wake of the demise of the socialism of the past. Review of Radical Political Economics24 (3/4): 1-28.