1st Edition

Unequal Treatment (Routledge Revivals) A Study in the Neo-Classical Theory of Discrimination

By Mats Lundahl, Eskil Wadensjo Copyright 1984
    316 Pages
    by Routledge

    328 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book, written by two leading Swedish economists and first published in 1984, constitutes a threefold contribution to the expanding field of economic discrimination. In the first place, it summarizes different approaches to the economics of discrimination, from the beginning of the British debate on equal pay in the 1890s onwards. Secondly, the book contains analytical chapters that, taking the theory originated by Gary Becker as their point of departure, critique and develop the Beckerian theory in a number of ways; in particular, the phenomenon known as crowding is investigated in different models. Finally, the theories thus developed are applied to a concrete case of discrimination: that of apartheid in South Africa. This is a fascinating title that will be of value to any economics students researching the development of discrimination theory during the twentieth-century in particular.

    Preface;  1. Introduction  2. Economic Theories of Discrimination  3. The Beckerian Approach to Discrimination  4. The Pecuniary Becker Model  5. A Two-Good Model with Complete Specialization  6. A Crowding Approach to Labor Market Segregation  7. A More Realistic Crowding Model  8. An Application of the Theory: Racial Discrimination in South Africa  9. Summary and Concluisons;  Bibliography;  Index

    Biography

    Mats Lundahl, Eskil Wadensjo