The publication database is continuously updated. Documents from older years will also be added gradually.
Kämpke, T.; Radermacher, F. J.
Income Modeling and Balancing – A Rigorous Treatment of Distribution Patterns Book
Springer International Publishing, 2015, ISBN: 978-3-319-13223-5.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Balance, English, equity, income distribution, Weltfinanzsystem
@book{Income_Modeling_Balancing_2015,
title = {Income Modeling and Balancing – A Rigorous Treatment of Distribution Patterns},
author = {T. Kämpke and F. J. Radermacher},
url = {https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783319132235},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-13224-2},
isbn = {978-3-319-13223-5},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-00-00},
publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
abstract = {This book presents a rigorous treatment of the mathematical instruments available for dealing with income distributions, in particular Lorenz curves and related methods. The methods examined allow us to analyze, compare and modify such distributions from an economic and social perspective. Though balanced income distributions are key to peaceful coexistence within and between nations, it is often difficult to identify the right kind of balance needed, because there is an interesting interaction with innovation and economic growth. The issue of justice, as discussed in Thomas Piketty’s bestseller “Capital in the Twenty-First Century” or in the important book “The Price of Inequality” by Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, is also touched on. Further, there is a close connection to the issue of democracy in the context of globalization. One highlight of the book is its rigorous treatment of the so-called Atkinson theorem and some extensions, which help to explain under which type of societal utility functions nations tend to operate either in the direction of more balance or less balance. Finally, there are some completely new insights into changing the balance pattern of societies and the kind of coalitions between richer and poorer parts of society to organize political support in democracies in either case. },
keywords = {Balance, English, equity, income distribution, Weltfinanzsystem},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {book}
}
Pestel, R.; Radermacher, F. J.
Equity, Wealth and Growth: Why Market Fundamentalism Makes Countries Poor Journal Article
In: TERRA 2000 project, 2004.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: equity, growth, whealth
@article{Pestel2004,
title = {Equity, Wealth and Growth: Why Market Fundamentalism Makes Countries Poor},
author = {R. Pestel and F. J. Radermacher},
url = {https://www.fawn-ulm.de/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Equity-Wealth-and-Growth.pdf},
year = {2004},
date = {2004-01-01},
journal = {TERRA 2000 project},
abstract = {The paper is intended as a contribution to the present scientific and political debate of how to organise markets and societies. Particular, the question is for the role and design of social systems. The paper tries to analyse how the relation is between social balance and a potential for growth. In particular it tries to give an answer whether the market fundamentalist position or propaganda is right, that deregulating societies always more and rewarding always stronger the top economic performers makes a country richer, while eventually everybody gains.},
keywords = {equity, growth, whealth},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Kämpke, T.; Pestel, R.; Radermacher, F. J.
A computational concept for normative equity Journal Article
In: Journal of Law and Economics, vol. 15, pp. 129-163, 2003.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: computational, concept, equity, Kämpke, normative
@article{Kämpke2003,
title = {A computational concept for normative equity},
author = {T. Kämpke and R. Pestel and F. J. Radermacher},
url = {https://www.fawn-ulm.de/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Kaempke-Pestel-Radermacher-2003-A-computational-concept-for-normative-Equity.pdf},
year = {2003},
date = {2003-06-15},
journal = {Journal of Law and Economics},
volume = {15},
pages = {129-163},
abstract = {The relative poverty concept of the European Union leads to a new approach for measuring equity and inequity in societies. The approach results from a differential equation for a one-parametric class of Lorenz curves. These allow to express societal inequity in terms of a so-called equity parameter. This parameter is not only of statistical or other, large-scale descriptive nature but it relates individual welfare to overall equity. The paper deals with the mathematical aspects, fitting questions, empirical findings, consequences for the middle class and some consequences for future growth processes aiming at more global equity and a sustainable development.},
keywords = {computational, concept, equity, Kämpke, normative},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}